An employment platform focused on inclusion will be recognized at the 2025 Brampton Accessibility Awards.
Inclusion-focused employment platform Enabled Talent is gaining traction in Europe and Africa following its global launch in October.
Enabled Talent says pilot projects are being implemented in Canada, the United States, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria and Mali.
The artificial intelligence (AI)-powered employment platform helps organizations hire people with disabilities through job matching, onboarding support, and accessibility tools. The startup's success will be celebrated locally in Brampton today. 2025 Accessibility AwardsAn annual award that recognizes people and organizations in the city who demonstrate a commitment to accessibility and inclusion for people with disabilities.
Enabled Talent co-founder Amandipp Singh, who was born with partial vision, told BetaKit in July that it is trying to “build the world's most inclusive platform for talent.” He hopes to make it easier for people with disabilities to complete everyday tasks by creating a platform based on feedback from others in their community.
Enabled Talent and Singh have had a lot going on in recent months. Following the platform's soft launch in January, the company celebrated its global launch in October this year with a regional rollout in Africa. Enabled Talent says it has pilot projects underway in Canada, the US, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria and Mali through employer registrations, non-profit collaborations and university recruiting centres.
“Brampton is proud to be the launchpad for Enabled Talent, a platform that combines innovation with compassion and puts inclusion at the heart of workforce transformation,” Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown said in a statement announcing the global launch.
CONNECTED: Enabled Talent uses AI to make every job disability-inclusive
The included talent was also selected for Rising UP in Spain program, accelerator, which helps startups open branches in the country. Enabled Talent's Program first step launch in Spain, which Singh told BetaKit should happen before February and will deepen its work across the European Union.
When BetaKit spoke with Singh in July, Enabled Talent had 8,000 users and 12 organizations on the platform, fueled by its acceptance into incubators such as AWS for Startups, Microsoft for Startups and the Nvidia Inception Program. Its presence in Africa began with a pilot project in Ghana as part of the UNICEF Startup Lab.
Speaking at an event to launch the Enabled Talent program in October, Ghana's Consul General Peter Kobina Taylor said the consulate was “optimistic” that testing the country's inclusive employment resources would “improve economic opportunity” and pave the way for partnerships in the region.
Earlier this year, Enabled Talent also partnered with Algoma University to further develop an AI-powered voice tool for people with visual impairments called Eynable.
Image courtesy of Enabled Talent.






