At the intersection of immigration, technical training, and entrepreneurial ambition emerges the professional biography of David Segura, a Mexican entrepreneur whose story is closely intertwined with the evolution of the technology sector in the United States. Segura founded VisionIT in 1997 with the idea of turning access to technology into a lever for workforce inclusion for Latino communities; in a short time, that vision became a company providing IT services, software development, and managed solutions for corporate and government clients.
VisionIT’s early growth was steady. According to reports from the 2010s, the firm scaled to hundreds of employees and posted significant revenue figures while expanding operations into Mexico, Puerto Rico, and India. This international footprint helped consolidate the company as one of the most relevant Hispanic-owned technology services groups in the United States.
Beyond the numbers, Segura’s trajectory illustrates a deliberate strategy: combining technically trained talent from local institutions with strong business networks and a cultural positioning that enabled access to federal contracts and major corporate clients. His leadership earned recognition from Latino business organizations and public appointments highlighting the contributions of Hispanic entrepreneurs to the regional technology ecosystem.
In practice, VisionIT has operated across specialized staffing, the implementation of solutions in healthcare and mobility, and the early adoption of trends such as cloud computing, secure communications, and digital health platforms. This operational diversification proved key to maintaining relevance in shifting markets and to sustaining technical employment in communities historically underrepresented in the sector.
Today, the defining elements of Segura’s case are replicable: leveraging technical education; directing a company’s offerings toward sectors with stable demand (government, healthcare, manufacturing); and building legitimacy through institutional partnerships. For the next generation of Latino entrepreneurs, his example underscores that scale in technology emerges not only from technical innovation, but from a sustained ability to connect talent, contracts, and community purpose.



