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Veteran, student entrepreneur and now frontline healthcare worker Brian Kam ’16 has a mission to serve

Nurse in PPE
Brian Kam in PPE as a front line COVID-19 medical responder

After spending time aiding disaster relief efforts in Nepal, alumnus Brian Kam is acquiring a new skill set.

Brian Kam’s experiences in Nepal during his senior year made him realize that, without medical training, his role in an emergency situation would be limited.

During Brian Kam’s senior year at Syracuse University, he volunteered as a disaster relief worker through an alumni-founded nongovernmental organization (NGO) in Nepal after the Gorkha earthquake in 2015. The devastation in Nepal was widespread. Thousands were killed or left homeless instantly. Seeing how these remote communities struggle with little to no national infrastructure changed Kam forever.

When he returned to campus in 2015, Kam founded Thrive Projects Inc. with fellow Syracuse University students Ryan Brinkerhoff ’16 and Joshua Moon ’16. The Marine Corps veteran wanted to continue to serve people in dire situations, no matter how difficult it was to reach them. He wanted the organization to work with communities to develop sustainable solutions to their biggest obstacles. Since its founding, Thrive has worked in disaster-stricken areas of Nepal and Haiti on projects related to first aid, community health and sustainable energy.

See original SU News story by Brandon Dyer here.

This is a repost

While the Nepal experience inspired Thrive to help communities in a macro sense, Kam also wanted to work with people individually—inspired by the medical personnel he watched in relief camps, particularly a nurse named Billie. “She showed an unimaginable amount of compassion, patience and endurance dealing with patients,” he says. Kam recognized that while it was great to respond to an emergency, without medical skills his role would be limited. He was determined to do what was needed to make an impact like Billie. “I talked to her many times about whether I should be a nurse,” he says.

Kam decided nursing school was his best opportunity to combine his passion for helping others with tangible medical experience, and he recently took the state license exam to become a registered nurse and completed the University of Rochester’s accelerated nursing program. “Billie had a lot to do with it,” says Kam. “She really defined what a nurse is.”

Kam says nursing school was intense and humbling. “At first, I underestimated how hard it was going to be,” he says. “My classmates had patient care and tech experience, and science-based degrees. It really intimidated me.” Kam is accustomed to being outside of his comfort zone. He immigrated with his family to Rochester, New York, at age 11 from Hong Kong. He did not speak English and graduated 490th in a high school class of 500. He enlisted in the Marine Corps at age 17 and served in the Iraq War and post-Katrina New Orleans.

Kam has a passion for serving others. The Marine veteran helped found Thrive Projects Inc. in Syracuse University’s Blackstone LaunchPad, a nonprofit that has since provided aid in Nepal and Haiti.

After honorably discharging at age 22, Kam enrolled at Syracuse University five years later to study international relations. He worried about fitting in with students who were a decade younger. But he opened his mind and worked with peers at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs and the Blackstone LaunchPad powered by Techstars. At the LaunchPad, a workspace and business incubator in Bird Library, Kam was able to access the University’s resources and global network that supports aspiring innovators, inventors and creators. The program serves faculty, staff, students and alumni across all disciplines. There he encountered a level of dedication that impressed him. Watching cofounders Brinkerhoff and Moon be fully invested in Thrive and share his vision helped Kam erase his negative preconceptions. “I saw my own biases and I overcame those,” he says. “And then when we collaborated, I really saw just how powerful that was.”

Learning how to collaborate was essential to Kam’s success in nursing school. “In a hospital environment, I’m going to be a part of a team, and I don’t have to go at it alone,” he says. “I have to rely on my team to give the patient the best possible outcome.”

There were many times the difficulty of nursing school left Kam feeling overwhelmed. In these instances, he would fall back on the mentorship he received at Blackstone LaunchPad. “I’ve learned a lot from my entrepreneurial journey,” he says. His Syracuse mentors impressed on him the importance of networking and being ambitious. Whenever the seemingly endless complications of developing an international NGO left him feeling unsure of himself, Kam’s mentors helped him concentrate on his values instead of the results. “I wanted to give up so many times because I was pushing something that wasn’t profit-driven,” he says. “I was goal-driven before, but when I started to see how many challenges and obstacles there were, I realized how laser-focused I had to be.”

Kam used that same mentality to complete nursing school and will be working in a pediatric emergency department at Golisano Children’s Hospital at Strong Memorial in Rochester. “Being able to adapt, overcome and roll with the punches in nursing school has helped me understand how I’m going to succeed as a nurse in the future,” he says.

His past experiences as an immigrant, Marine, student entrepreneur and disaster relief worker all contributed to his growth. “It was an evolving process,” he says. “All of the skills I learned were part of my development.”

Kam says he is excited to combine his discipline, empathy and compassion with his desire to serve. “I want to step up even more and do the best I can to intervene in a crisis and help drive positive patient outcomes.”

This story by Brandon Dyer is re-posted from an original story published on June 9, 2020 by SU News.

Smarta and FSCL selected for summer fellowship program

Syracuse University startups, Smarta, co-founded by David Fox ’19 (iSchool) and Nicholas Barba ’20 (Whitman)  and FSCL, co-founded by Sam Hollander ’22 (Whitman and Newhouse dual major) are among 50 entrepreneurs selected for a Techstars summer fellowship to focus for eight weeks on advancing their ventures.  They will join college students and recent alumni from the U.S. and Ireland in a program by the Blackstone LaunchPad powered by Techstars global network to validate their strategies and advance their businesses.

During the program, the fellows will participate in coaching sessions as well as mentoring from Blackstone Campus Ambassadors and Techstars Entrepreneurs and Advisors. Students will also have the opportunity to hear first-hand from Techstars CEO and Co-Founder David Brown, as well as entrepreneurs like Allbirds Co-Founder Tim Brown, CareMessage Co-Founder Cecilia Corral, and SparkCharge Co-Founder (and Syracuse University LaunchPad alumnus) Josh Aviv during the “LaunchPad Lessons Learned” speaker series.

David Fox, co-founder of Smarta, at the LaunchPad’s Startup Weekend with Techstars

Smarta is a next-generation property and smart device management system that helps prepare property owners of apartments and other multi-family complexes for the future demand of smart home appliances. Recognizing that current consumer devices don’t have the security or privacy standards necessary to belong in a home environment, Smarta’s blockchain-based system will provide tenants a full smart home experience without impeding upon their rights to network security and personal privacy. During the Summer Fellowship, Smarta hopes to make strong advancements on the development of their property management platform, conduct meaningful customer discovery, and create the blockchain architecture that will support Smarta devices including smart locks, smart lights, and more.

“This Summer Fellowship not only gives Smarta the flexibility to conduct research and development at a faster rate than previously possible, but will also connect us to industry experts and leaders that can guide us through the challenges we are bound to face throughout our go-to-market strategy,”” said David Fox who also serves as president of the company.

Nicholas Barba, co-founder of Smarta (center) with LaunchPad Global Fellows Victoria Lawson (left) and Emma Rothman (right) at the LaunchPad’s Startup Weekend with Techstars

“Funding is the most frightening and common roadblock for startups, and Smarta is no exception,” said Nicholas Barba. “The Techstar fellowship will help us develop our prototype and approach angel investors. I’m very excited for the opportunities, connections, and productivity in store for Smarta over the next eight weeks.”

Sam Hollander, co-founder of FSCL, at the LaunchPad’s Startup Weekend with Techstars

FSCL is creating a simple, affordable, and flexible solution to finance higher education. America is in over $1.7 trillion of student debt, and FSCL is pioneering the use of Financial Technology (FinTech) and alternative finance vehicles to lessen the burden of student debt on Americans. FSCL’s vision is to transform students’ lives by reducing financial stress. During the LaunchPad Fellowship, FSCL hopes to begin identifying and developing strategic partnerships, prepare materials needed for pre-seed investment, and begin product development.

“The LaunchPad Fellowship will provide me with access to invaluable resources to help accelerate FSCL’s growth,” said Sam Hollander, FSCL founder. “Not only will I be able to network with professional mentors, but I will have access to an incredible peer-network of likeminded student-entrepreneurs. I am confident that this program will be extraordinarily helpful to both myself and FSCL, and I’m extremely excited to be a part of it.”

“At a time of unprecedented challenge for college students and recent graduates, entrepreneurship will be a key component of the solution for young entrepreneurs and their local communities,” said Amy Stursberg, Executive Director of the Blackstone Charitable Foundation. “By applying the resources and network of LaunchPad to the energy and ingenuity of these young people, the industry-transforming startups of tomorrow are being built today by LaunchPad Fellows.”

Students that applied to the LaunchPad Summer Startup Fellowship this summer operate startups in a wide range of industries. The LaunchPad Summer Startup Fellowship will create a collaborative network of student entrepreneurs working on ideas in the same and differing industries from campuses across the country and globe. 

In addition to coaching and mentorship from LaunchPad Campus Directors and Blackstone Campus Ambassadors throughout the eight weeks, students will also get the chance to participate in a Techstars Mentor Week. The LaunchPad Student Startup Fellowship will conclude July 31, 2020.

“We are thrilled that Dave, Nick and Sam were selected for this competitive Fellowships from more than 300 applicants,” said Linda Dickerson Hartsock, executive director of the Syracuse University LaunchPad program.  “They scored very highly in the competition, which was open to startups at 24 universities from across the United States and Ireland. This summer they will be joining a network of ambitious, talented and like-minded student entrepreneurs, and given the opportunity to showcase their ventures on a global stage.  We know it will be a wonderful personal and professional development experience, as they take their business to the next stage.”

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About Blackstone LaunchPad powered by Techstars

The Blackstone LaunchPad powered by Techstars entrepreneurship network helps students succeed in entrepreneurship and in their careers. Open to all students and recent alumni in all majors, the campus-based Blackstone LaunchPad powered by Techstars network enables participants to access mentoring, grow their network, and access the resources to accelerate the success of their business. For more information, see www.blackstonelaunchpad.org

About Blackstone Charitable Foundation

The Blackstone Charitable Foundation was founded at the time of Blackstone’s IPO in 2007 with substantial commitments from the Firm’s employees. Influenced by the enterprising heritage of the firm and its founders, The Blackstone Charitable Foundation is directing its resources and applying the intellectual capital of the firm to foster entrepreneurship in areas nationwide and globally. Through its investment expertise across several asset classes and geographies, Blackstone has a unique perspective on the global economy and a heightened understanding of how entrepreneurial activity is often the crucial catalyst in the growth of successful businesses, industries, and communities. For more information, see http://www.blackstone.com/foundation.

About Techstars

Techstars is the global platform for investment and innovation. Techstars founders connect with other entrepreneurs, experts, mentors, alumni, investors, community leaders, and corporations to grow their companies. Techstars operates three divisions: Techstars Mentorship-Driven Accelerator Programs, Techstars Corporate Innovation Partnerships, and Techstars Communities. Techstars accelerator portfolio includes more than 2,200 companies with a market cap of more than $26 billion. www.techstars.com

22 students and alumni selected for the LaunchPad’s first SummerStart accelerator

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Twenty-two students and alumni have been selected for SummerStart, the first ever summer accelerator program at the LaunchPad.  The virtual program launches June 15 and culminates in an Innovation Showcase the week of July 27.  Some of those accepted are at the idea stage, some are looking to join teams, some are looking for team members, and some are well advanced as ventures.  The program is self-paced with mentors assigned to each student, regular one-on-one coaching sessions, and opportunities to hear from famous entrepreneurs, industry experts and investors.

Individuals selected for the program include:  Alec O’del; Aley O’Mara; Amit Chandramouly; Anthony Obas; Calvin Atieku; Chizoba Anyaoha; Connor Johnson; Gabriela Holliman-Lopez; Hanna Seraji; Joshua Cohen; Justin Diaz; Manvi Upadhyay; Marin Grillo; Miles Feldstein; Nancy Wang; Nicolas Misita; Priyank Jethva; Shawn Gaetano; Sheldon Stoney; Sonia Hui Ting Wee; Timothy Tin You Li; and Zheng Xiong.

The diverse students represent a wide variety of perspectives.  Four students are currently working in the LaunchPad on ventures, and 17 are students coming to the program with new ideas.  They come from across campus, with representation from Arts and Sciences, Engineering and Computer Science, Information Studies (iSchool), Maxwell, Newhouse, Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) and Whitman.  Two are PhD candidates and two are graduate students. Three are alumni.

“As many students lost opportunities for summer employment because of the pandemic, this is a great time to double down on building entrepreneurial skills and exploring innovation,” said LaunchPad executive director Linda Hartsock.  “There is no better time than summer to do some blue-sky thinking, which is an approach to creativity without limits, to create innovative solutions.  Working independently and together, we’ll be using a deep ocean ecosystem model – a community that shares a common habitat, but with great diversity.  This summer is when the sky meets the ocean at the LaunchPad.”

To assist them, a team of LaunchPad Global Fellows and the Rubin Family Innovation Mentors have been working with LaunchPad alumni who are members of the Founders Circle to build a peer mentor network.  The Founders Circle is a group of active, dedicated LaunchPad alumni who significantly contributed to the development of the program. They are trailblazers, role models, and thought leaders, and are looking forward to being mentors for our Summer Start entrepreneurs.

Applications open for The Rubin Family Innovation Mentors thanks to a gift from The Rubin Family Foundation

Innovation mentors
Photo of 2019-2020 Rubin Family Innovation Mentors:
Left to right, Matt Schumer, Quinn King, Alec Gillinder, Kelsey Davis and David Fox

The LaunchPad at SU Libraries is now accepting applications and nominations for the second class of The Rubin Family Innovation Mentors for the 2020-21 academic year. The program is funded through a gift facilitated by Todd B. Rubin ’04 (School of Architecture), Minister of Evolution and President of The Republic of Tea. The gift from The Rubin Family Foundation will fund part-time employment of five Syracuse University students who are seasoned entrepreneurs to peer mentor other student innovators at the LaunchPad.

Applications and nominations for undergraduate and graduate students will be accepted from every academic discipline. Applications are online here.

“We are excited as a family to continue supporting inspiring entrepreneurial students at Syracuse University,” said Rubin. “I’ve seen the inaugural class of The Rubin Family Innovation Mentors grow personally and professionally, while teaching life and leadership skills to so many other student entrepreneurs. The entire ecosystem benefits from this kind of community building. Our family believes in entrepreneurial mentorship that helps students achieve their dreams and goals, and we have been impressed with their many accomplishments over this past year, along with the leadership provided by the LaunchPad’s executive director, Linda Dickerson Hartsock.”

The Rubin Family Innovation Mentors provide multi-disciplinary skill sets to help student innovators learn both hard and soft skills to launch businesses and careers. Building a peer mentoring and learning community greatly expands the LaunchPad’s capacity to serve even more students.

The five Rubin Family Innovation Mentors for the past academic year were:

  • David Fox ’19 (School of Information Studies) and student at Syracuse University’s College of Law, co-founder of Smarta;
  • Kelsey Davis G ’20 (Whitman) and ’19 (S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications), co-founder of CLLCTVE;
  • Alec Gillinder ’20, an industrial and interaction design major in the College of Visual and Performing Arts, and co-founder of MedUX LLC;
  • Quinn King ’20, an industrial and interaction design major in the College of Visual and Performing Arts, and co-founder of MedUX LLC; and
  • Matt Shumer ’22 an entrepreneurship and emerging enterprises major in the Martin J. Whitman School of Management, and founder of Visos VR.

Together, they mentored more than 50 student teams, organized and ran Startup Weekend and Mentor Madness, prepared teams for campus, state and national competitions, and helped them with research and discovery, team building, goal setting and achieving milestones. Along the way, The Rubin Family Innovation Mentors also continued to build their own ventures, win national awards, and raise investment to take their ideas from concept to commercialization.

“The LaunchPad provides students with experiential opportunities that compliment what they learn in a classroom,” said Dean of Libraries and University Librarian David Seaman. “Learning these personal characteristics and practical skills help them become better global citizens. We are very grateful to The Rubin Family Foundation for continuing to support the university’s innovation hub at Bird Library which has become the campus crossroads of exploration and discovery.”

“LaunchPad alumni achieve success after graduation, whatever path they pursue,” added Hartsock.  “They are distinguishing themselves as business and civic leaders who create meaningful impact around the world. Todd and his family are helping to create a culture of giving that inspires young alumni to remain engaged and give back to Syracuse University as they mentor the next generation of student innovators.”

The Rubin Family Innovation Mentors class of 2019-2020 will be part of the selection committee to pick the next five mentors for the coming academic year.

The LaunchPad is hiring students for the coming academic year

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What’s the best place to work on campus? Anyone who has worked at the LaunchPad will tell you it is here, as part of our team at SU Libraries. We’re currently recruiting students to become our next cohort of LaunchPad Global Fellows. You’ll build a professional resume, but also develop skill sets that will help you pursue the career of your dreams. Along the way, you will help build a creative high-performance community and make friendships with like-minded innovators that you will take through life. We’re gearing up for next fall and offering student employment opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students with special skill sets such as writing, design, photography/videography, digital storytelling, events planning, product design, hardware, software, and more.

LaunchPad Global Fellows are self-starters and team players who work together as a creative studio to support LaunchPad programming and provide direct services to Syracuse University ventures.  Think of it as being part of a full-service startup agency.

Look for the job posting on Handshake and apply here. You must be a member of the LaunchPad to apply, so if you haven’t already done so, join now It’s quick and easy: https://launchpad.syr.edu/join/

Want to get a glimpse of what it is like to be part of our community? Catch a feel with these short inspiring videos by our members.

We’ll be accepting cover letters and resumes through early August and selecting candidates for the coming academic year. Be sure to tell us in your application and cover letter what you love about the LaunchPad, your skill sets, and how you would help build our community.

Positions will start in August shortly before school returns. We look forward to hearing from you. If you have any questions or want more information, feel free to e-mail: LaunchPad@syr.edu

Applications still open for our first ever virtual summer accelerator

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We are still accepting applications to our first ever free virtual Summer Startup accelerator. You don’t need a venture participate. Even if you are just interested in exploring ideas, we can help you match you with teams and mentors.  From June 15 through July 20 participate in a self-paced mentor-driven virtual accelerator program culminating in an Innovation Showcase the week of July 27. You’re a perfect candidate if you want to work on a team of like-minded innovators and creatives, meet amazing mentors and explore ideas that solve problems through entrepreneurial solutions. It’s six weeks of fantastic fun, meeting great people, and working on something exciting together.  The program is open to all SU students and recent alumni— whether you have an idea that you want to accelerate, or wish you had one and want to work on a high-performance team.

Here’s how it works:

  • Apply to participate by e-mailing us at LaunchPad@syr.edu
  • If you are working on an idea, tell us what skill sets you are looking for in team members
  • If you don’t have an idea, but want to be part of a team, tell us about your skills sets
  • We’ll help make matches and build great teams
  • Meetup virtually through platforms like the LaunchPad Syracuse Slack and Discord channels, and exchange ideas and advice
  • Get matched with industry and alumni mentors
  • Get access to a toolkit to create a roadmap to help make progress and showcase your idea or venture
  • Participate in team mentor matchmaking and fun group social events
  • Pitch your work in an Innovation Showcase to industry experts and investors
  • Get a story written about your team for wide distribution, that you can add to your social media and professional profiles
  • Earn a “Summer Startup” certificate of completion that you can put on your resume and celebrate the very cool thing you did this summer

Among the highlights of the program:

  • June 15 Kick-off Call and Goal Setting
  • June 18, Fireside chat with Tim Brown, Co-Founder at Allbirds
  • June 25, Fireside chat with Josh Aviv, Founder and CEO of Spark Charge and LaunchPad student alum
  • July 13, Mentor Office Hours Week using our new mentor-matching platform being developed by our great LaunchPad team of Global Fellows, Rubin Family Innovation Mentors and the Founders Circle
  • July 16, Fireside chat with David Brown, CEO and co-founder of Techstars 
  • Week of July 27, Innovation Showcase with industry experts and investors

Over the course of the program we will feature a number of speakers and give participants the opportunity to interact with both speakers and mentors. Best of all, the program is self-paced, helping you make it work on your schedule.

The program will run alongside a separate LaunchPad Summer Startup program with Techstars.  Fellowships are being awarded through that invite-only program through the Blackstone Charitable Foundation and will be announced the end of this week.

Don’t miss this opportunity. Applications close shortly.  E-mail us now:  LaunchPad@syr.edu

Sign up for Intelligence ++ a new inclusive entrepreneurship program with mentoring by a top global entrepreneur

Two design professionals
Gianfranco Zaccai and Don Carr

Now is the time to sign up for a new interdisciplinary inclusive entrepreneurship program being offered for the 2020-21 academic year in a partnership of the Blackstone LaunchPad powered by Techstars at Syracuse University Libraries, the Taishoff Center for Inclusive Higher Education (InclusiveU) and the  College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA).  The program launched with a generous donation by Gianfranco Zaccai ’70 H’09 and the Zaccai Foundation for Augmented Intelligence (Intelligence++). It will provide new courses open for fall enrollment and will culminate in a design and entrepreneurship competition with $30,000 in prizes.  Sign up now for DES 400-600, taught by Don Carr, professor in VPA’s School of Design with Gianfranco Zaccai, a renowned global innovator and designer, serving as a mentor and guest lecturer for the course. Zaccai was co-founder of Continuum, now EPAM Continuum, a global innovation by design consultancy with offices in Boston, Milan, Seoul and Shanghai.

With an emphasis on interdisciplinary and collaborative innovation, the two-semester program is available as an elective to both undergraduate and graduate students from any school or college at Syracuse University, including students with intellectual disability from InclusiveU. It will be taught in the LaunchPad at Bird Library.

This flagship program is made possible through the support of the Zaccai Foundation for Augmented Intelligence, founded by Gianfranco Zaccai. The Zaccai Foundation seeks to develop, stimulate and leverage technological, educational and organizational innovation to enable and empower individuals with intellectual disability, their families and their communities to improve quality of life, enhance independence and productivity, lower cost and benefit society.

“I am confident that this program will be revolutionary in stimulating brilliant students, educators, and researchers to deeply explore and meaningfully innovate a better future,” Zaccai says.  “We have an opportunity to blend in-context research, people-centered design, and the strengths and skills of diverse people and disciplines in a way that can change the world for the better for people of all abilities and talents. That’s why we’re so excited to partner with Syracuse University—we see the potential that a cross-disciplinary, multi-dimensional, innovative approach can bring to our society, and we want to propel young people to be at the forefront of developing real-world solutions.”

Concepts developed throughout the course will be presented to a panel of experts in a culminating competition in spring 2021, with $30,000 in seed funding awarded to the most promising ideas for further development.

The program was developed with the support of Quinn King ’20, founder of MedUX and a Rubin Family Innovation Mentor at the LaunchPad. King had a keen interest in working on the project as a student founder with a design company that focuses on user experience and because he has a close family member with an intellectual disability.

For more information about the program, contact Don Carr at dwcarr@syr.edu, Beth Myers at bemyers@syr.edu or Linda Dickerson Hartsock at ldhart01@syr.edu.

Alec Gillinder ’20 and Quinn King ’20 selected for prestigious MassChallenge Boston accelerator

Two men working in a design studio
Alec Gillinder and Quinn King working on their prototype at the School of Design

MassChallenge, a global network of zero-equity startup accelerators, has selected MedUX, a company founded by recent Syracuse University graduates Alec Gillinder ’20 and Quinn King ’20 (VPA School of Design), as one of the early-stage startups that will join the 2020 MassChallenge Boston program. The startups were rigorously selected by a community of more than 500 expert judges and represent the top 9% of applications from around the world.

Gillinder and King co-founded the company as students at SU.  A medical product company based on user-centered design, the team’s first product is a wearable/portable IV system for people in hospital, infusion center, and home infusion settings, as well as emergency first response and military use,  to receive infusion treatment without being tethered to an IV pole.

As students, they enjoyed great success at Syracuse, starting with Invent@SU and then working with the Blackstone LaunchPad powered by Techstars at SU Libraries to commercialize their concept.  Among their accomplishments as student entrepreneurs:

  • First place winner of the Invent@SU Competition
  • First place winner of the ‘Cuse Tank Competition
  • First place winners of the Impact Prize Competition
  • Frist place winner of the Panasci Business Plan Competition, Whitman School of Management
  • First place winner of the Syracuse University ACC InVenture Prize Competition
  • Second place national winner of the ACC InVenture Prize national competition at NC State
  • First place winner of the Upstate NY Global Student Entrepreneurship Competition
  • Finalists in the nationals of the Global Student Entrepreneurship Competition
  • First place winner of the Medical Device Challenge by the CNY Biotech Accelerator at Upstate Medical University
  • Participants in the Blackstone LaunchPad Techstars Propel Program

In addition to being one of the highest performing ventures in Syracuse University innovation ecosystem the past two years, they have also been active coaches and advisors to other student startups as two of the inaugural Rubin Family Innovation Mentors at the LaunchPad.

“The foundation they built at Syracuse positions them for success as they officially launch into the MassChallenge Boston accelerator,” said Linda Dickerson Hartsock, executive director of the LaunchPad.  “They worked incredibly hard to achieve this, and we are so proud that they are joining a very elite group of top startups from around the world on a fast track to success.” 

MassChallenge is a global network of zero-equity startup accelerators headquartered in the United States with locations in Boston, Israel, Mexico, Rhode Island, Switzerland, and Texas. The program supports high-potential startups across all industries, from anywhere in the world. To date, more than 2,400 MassChallenge alumni have raised more than $6.2B in funding, generated more than $3B in revenue, and created more than 157,000 total jobs.

“The MassChallenge Boston program stands on more than a decade’s worth of proven experience working with entrepreneurs and corporate organizations to help accelerate innovation and drive economic growth,” stated Damon Cox, Assistant Secretary for Technology, Innovation and Entrepreneurship at Commonwealth of Massachusetts and MassChallenge Advisory Board member. “I am excited that the program has pivoted to a virtual model to continue the essential work of supporting startups that eventually go on to create jobs and drive economic growth in Massachusetts and beyond.”

Since March, MassChallenge’s world-class network of investors, serial entrepreneurs, corporate executives, and academics have evaluated applications based on each startup’s ability to demonstrate high impact and high potential in their fields. This year’s 2020 Boston cohort reflects an exceptional cross-section of innovators from all industries and from 12 countries around the globe. MedUX was one of only six New York State companies selected for the 2020 MassChallenge Boston cohort. 

Top industries this year include:

  • 34% High Tech
  • 32% Healthcare and Life sciences
  • 19% General, including materials, hardware, retail and consumer goods
  • 11% Social Impact
  • 4% Cleantech and Energy

“Alec and Quinn were guided by great industrial and interaction design faculty mentors like Dr. Louise Manfredi, who co-directed Invent@SU. They concurrently worked diligently with the LaunchPad on an investment-ready roadmap while conducting a great deal of discovery with strategic advisors and users, all of which validated the need for their invention,” added Hartsock. “Over the past year they used their campus prize winnings to finalize a production designs for both health care and military use, file a non-provisional patent, hire an FDA consultant, manufacture product samples, and met with distributors to plan a path to market.  They have interest from hospitals and infusion centers and are actively engaged with conversations with European partners on how to enter the military market. Now, as part of MassChallenge Boston 2020, this will be their break-out year.”

“I’m beyond excited to have been accepted into MassChallenge Boston and get to continue to grow our company and improve our product with the help of their experts,” said Gillinder. “Quinn and I are honored to be part of their elite group of innovators and we are looking forward to bringing all we have to the table in the next couple months.”

“I felt blessed and honored to find out that Alec and I got into the MassChallenge Accelerator,” added King. “Having the opportunity to expand our company into the Boston biotech space will be instrumental in the success of our launch. Now that we are graduates, we will be moving full steam ahead on our mission to bring our product in the hands of people who need it.”

Gursha ’10 and Damiano ’18 team for June 10 Zoom chat on building and leading agile startups

two entrepreneurs side by side

Join Syracuse University alumni Mike Gursha ’10 (Whitman and Newhouse) and AJ Damiano ’18 (Whitman) for a Zoom chat Wednesday, June 10 at 3 p.m..  The founders of Rookie Road and PowerSpike will host an interactive session about “startup life” — from building a team and company culture, to finding smart partners and smart money.  The event is part of a “Tea Talks” series in partnership with The Republic of Tea, and is open to the community.  The Zoom link is here.

Gursha will be sharing his perspective as chairman and CEO of Portland based Rookie Road, Inc., a one of a kind digital destination that provides the rules, lingo, and gameplay for a variety of sports in an easy to understand way. He became CEO in 2016 after serving as a special advisor to the founder. 

Previously, Gursha was the vice president of strategic initiatives at Curemark, LLC, a New York-based biotechnology company focused on the treatment of neurological disorders. Earlier in his career, Gursha’s interest in technology led him to Google, where, at age 18, he spent two summers working in the new business development group at the Mountain View, California headquarters. Gursha serves on the board of directors for America On Tech a non-profit focused on technology education.  He is also an advisor to Damiano and sits on the PowerSpike board.

Damiano is a LaunchPad and Techstars alum, and co-founder of PowerSpike.  The venture recently closed a round with The Sixers Innovation Lab Crafted by Kimball, Techstars Atlanta – in partnership with Cox Enterprises, Dorm Room Fund, and other outside investors.  PowerSpike is the all-in-one influencer marketing platform to boost brand awareness, drive sales, and create authentic content with more than 20,000 Twitch & Mixer influencers, partnering with some of the best live streamers. The platform helps utilizes innovative marketplace and AI technology to help brands accelerate business growth through live streaming influencer marketing campaigns that fit any budget. 

Both Gursha and Damiano actively mentor SU student startups. As friends and founders, they are both charismatic speakers on building and leading teams, and agile development.

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New recovery loan program for microbusinesses as they get back to business after COVID-19

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A new program by New York State is providing assistance for micro-businesses and startup ventures with 20 or fewer full-time equivalent employees — which represent 90% of all businesses — as well as  nonprofit organizations. New York Forward Loan Fund (NYFLF) is a new economic recovery loan program aimed at supporting New York State small businesses as they reopen after the COVID-19 outbreak and NYS on PAUSE. NYFLF is providing working capital loans so that small businesses, nonprofits and small landlords have access to credit as they reopen.

The working capital loans are timed to support businesses and organizations with expenses to comply with guidelines as they reopen (e.g., inventory, marketing, rent and utilities, property taxes, supplies and refitting for new social distancing guidelines) under the New York Forward Plan.  They are for entities that did not receive a loan from either the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) or SBA Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL) for COVID-19 in 2020. 

The interest rate is 3% for small businesses and 2% for nonprofits. Small businesses can apply for up to $100,000 or up to 100% of average monthly revenues in any 3-month period from 2019 to first quarter 2020.  The term is 60 months with interest.  The first 12 months are interest only, paid monthly with interest and principal payments starting in month 13.  No collateral is required.  There is no application fee.  The loans are not forgivable in part or whole, and need to be paid back over the 5-year term with interest.  They cannot be used to refinance existing debt.

The program is not first-come, first-served loan. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis as regions and industries reopen.

Complete program details and application guidelines are here:  https://www.connect2capital.com/partners/new-york-forward-loan-fund/

Five Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) will be processing pre-applications starting June 1, 2020:  Accion East, Community Preservation Corporation, National Development Council, Pursuit and TruFund Financial Services. 

The New York Forward Loan Fund is supported by Apple Bank, BNB Bank, BlackRock Charitable Fund, Citi Foundation, Evans Bank, Ford Foundation, M&T Bank, Morgan Stanley, the Ralph C. Wilson, Jr. Foundation, and Wells Fargo.

The program is administered through the Empire State Development division of Small Business and Technology Development.

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