Startup Spotlights

Samuel Chazen ’21 builds a food education venture inspired by idea lists he made as a child

student in a suit jacket

Sam Chazen was born to be inventive and energetic. When he was a child, he dreamed of jumping eight feet high in the air, as well as many other “outlandish inventions” that sound a little silly to him now as an adult.

His father, however, encouraged him to write all of his ideas down and keep them in a journal. This became a stimulative idea because Chazen generated the idea of founding his own business based on a short phrase he wrote down — food encyclopedia.

The idea of constructing a food encyclopedia inspired the birth of Food-E, an innovative application used to connect communities far and wide through a cross-cultural passion for food and cooking. Along the foundation of this new-born company, Chazen is also on his journey to understand food culture from an entrepreneur’s eye.

Chazen is currently a senior studying marketing management and entrepreneurship and emerging enterprises at the Martin J. Whitman School of Management of Syracuse University. Before entering college, he did not really have an idea of what to major in but knew that he wanted to study business when he was in high school.

“It was a process of elimination.  I looked on the list of all the majors at the Whitman School,” Chazen said. Accounting, finance and supply chain management sounded too far removed from his interests, but marketing, along with a dual major in entrepreneurship, felt like a perfect combination.  These interests seemed embedded in his blood.

There is a long history of entrepreneurship in his family. Chazen’s mother’s-side great-grandfather owned a steel factory and invented and held one of the original patents for the fly swatter and the metal coat hanger.  His father’s-side great-grandfather also held a patent for the first industrial microwave vending machine.  His own father started a company back in the late 2000s.

All these family stories inspired Chazen to select the field of marketing. After gaining real-world marketing experiences through internships, he opened himself to entrepreneurship and joined the Entrepreneurship LaunchPad class with Linda Hartsock, the executive director of Blackstone LaunchPad at SU who is an adjunct faculty member in the EEE program at the Whitman School of Management.

“I would not be where I am without this class.  There are so many resources that I’m able to utilize from the class,” Chazen said. In this class, Chazen is also able to further develop his idea of Food-E into a real venture as part of competitions through the LaunchPad, the iSchool and at the Whitman School.

Food-E is a two-pronged application that includes a social media platform made for sharing recipes and promoting creativity in the kitchen with a food information database to bridge the gap among food information. The two main questions that Chazen and his team want to answer through this application are what people should make, and whether it is healthy, Chazen said.

“I realized that there were a lot of ways to answer these questions, but they were all done on different platforms, and you definitely weren’t getting both of the answers to those questions on the same platform,” Chazen said. “So, my team and I created the Food-E app to connect and educate people from around the world.”

Chazen designed this application with a long-term vision of making it useful for everyone, but also realized that he needs to narrow in on first markets. For the initial audience base, Food-E wants to serve three main groups of people — high school and college athletes who need to track their nutritional intake, young professionals who are living on their own for the first time and need to learn to cook for themselves, and young parents who want guidance on healthier foods for their children. These three initial target segments will be his first path to market, but the beauty of Food-E is that it is universal and can easily appeal to broader groups, Chazen added.

To better integrate into social media, the team has conducted discovery around different food platforms, including Instagram, Twitter and Tik-Tok.

“We discovered some interesting statistics. For example, the #food tag on Instagram has 417 million posts and #nutrition has 55 million,” Chazen said.  “There is a rapidly growing forum to share food via multimedia because #food on Tik-Tok has 80.9 billion views and #nutrition has 1.4. I think it comes down to the fact that people love to eat, and one of the hardest things of being an adult is figuring out what to eat three times a day.”

Right now, Chazen and his team are working on seeking funding opportunities to further develop their business. They have just won 3rd place in the School of Information Studies Raymond von Dran iPrize for Student Entrepreneurship with a $1,000 prize and will be moving on to the statewide finals of the New York Business Plan Competition.

Chazen also wants to recognize of the contributions of his team, including Nick Julian as the director of digital content, Edwin Duke as the director of finance, Chris Wildman as the director of marketing, and Ryan Kiey as the director of IT.

He and his team have a collective goal of tackling even more business competitions and pursuing other opportunities.  “We see ourselves on the verge of success, but we’re also facing hurdles, Chazen says.  That’s the path of entrepreneurship. “We’ve done a really good job of managing both the long-term and short-term views and our goal is to stay on track.” 

As a founder, Chazen loves one entrepreneurial quote. “You have to always have your telescope with a microscope.”  He’s using both to build the ideas that started with his imaginative childhood book of lists.

Story by Kaizhao Zero Lin, LaunchPad Global Fellow

Cullen Kavanaugh ’22 is placing his bet on Spread

Person in front of a computer screen

It’s often said that necessity is the mother of invention. Progress is shaped by identifying problems or responding to crises and developing new technology or systems to adequately address them. But while necessity may give birth to invention, what sustains it and breathes life into it is passion. No company would ever be founded, and no product patented without the long hours of work and sacrifice driven by love for what you’re creating.

Cullen Kavanaugh ’22, studying finance and real estate in the Martin J. Whitman School of Management is the perfect example of the businesses and ingenuity that can come from personal love for a topic and the process of creating a solution. To say that Kavanaugh is a sports fan is an understatement. It’s what he and his friends’ bond over and find thrill in the hours spent immersed watching a riveting game or betting each other on the success of teams and players.

When COVID-19 hit and college students found themselves at their homes all around the country, separated from the academic community and friendships, Kavanaugh and his friends lost their shared time and excitement over one of their favorite activities: betting each other over the games. Separated by distance, their only alternative was to bet on online platforms similar to casinos, losing the socialization and closeness the found in the activity.

Driven by finding an alternative to the current ineffective models of online sports wagering, Kavanaugh decided to found his own company for sports betting. Together with a few of his close friends who all met at the end of their freshman year in their fraternity he formed the company Spread: a peer-to-peer wagering platform.

“We found a problem over quarantine with the sports betting world and wanted to find a way to create something unique,” Kavanaugh said.

Spread aimed to solve three main problems within sports betting: lack of socialization, percentage cuts of winnings from online platforms, and lack of customization of bets. Their peer-to-peer wagering platform eliminates any fees and creates a social platform for people to bet with each other and customize as they wish.

Spread’s well-rounded team contributes largely to the growth and soon launch of their business. Daniel Slate, studying public policy in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, is the head of operations.  Daniel Stern, studying sports management in the Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics is the head of marketing. Quinn Francis, studying accounting in the Martin J. Whitman School of Management is the head of finance. 

Their current path to market is beginning to take shape as states are beginning to legalize on-line gambling.  Until now, the heavy regulations around sports betting have made it difficult for the team to build their business, but Spread is getting started by working to improve people’s perceptions on sports betting.

“We aim to change the taboo behind sports betting and make it more friendly and fun,” Kavanaugh said of the team’s hope for shifting sports betting culture.

What has sustained the team’s drive to launch Spread through hard work and navigating a heavily regulated field is their own love for sports and what they’re creating.

“We live and breathe sports. I love what I do.  I work 8 hours a day at this and never get bored or tired,“ Kavanaugh said of his passion for sports.

To pour your energy and time into creation of a business is nothing less than exhausting and demanding. Particularly in a field where current laws are not allowing a launch or success, the effort demanded is intense. Yet passion for what you do is a boundless energy that motivates individuals to throw their whole selves into creation of what they love. Kavanaugh and Spread is the perfect example of what we can create if we too focus our energies on what we love.

By Claire Howard ’23, LaunchPad Global Media Fellow

Alex Don ’22 creates an audio-based social media app

Social media, in principle, is a tool for connection. Regardless of their location, users can connect with anyone across the world and share photos, videos, and a plethora of other types of content. But, as documentaries like the Social Dilemma reveal, because of social media’s influence on our lives, people have become skeptical on whether platforms like Instagram and Twitter a positive or negative force are. 

Alex Don, a junior studying both Marketing and EEE at the Whitman School of Management, is originally from Mountain View, California. He saw a huge flaw in the social media market. “Social media has been used and advertised incorrectly as a tool to promote an idealized self-image,” he says. “Instead of being a hindrance to connectivity, social media should be an outlet for healthy self-expression.”

That’s why he decided to create his own social media platform called CIRUS. CIRUS is an audio-based social media app where users get 90 seconds to create and share creative audio content. “We want to become the TikTok of podcasting and music,” Don says, “The best comparison I can give is the analogy of a TikTok of sound, as we are eliminating the visual aspect of social media.  We want to promote the users’ voice over an idealized image.”

Growing up in Taiwan, his entrepreneurial spirit emerged at a young age. “I curated the selling and trading of comics during middle school which helped me realize the value of entrepreneurship and helped me solidify that as a path I wanted to take.” 

As he got older, Don had the opportunity to intern at Regent Hotel where he fostered a love for marketing and more specifically, social media marketing. During his time at Regent, he grew the hotel’s Instagram following from 52 to 9,000 followers and he knew he had a knack for creating online communities. 

He started CIRUS with the idea of creating a business model that is effective yet distinct from other social media platforms. He says, “A lot of apps use an ad-based model, but everyone knows ads are annoying and disruptive.  I thought there was a better way to advertise.”

For CIRUS, Don wanted to use create an attention-based model. He says, “Rather than interrupting users’ attention in order to market to them, we want to capture our user’s attention through content they are listening to or creating on our app, and through direct marketing we will be able to direct our users’ attention to products that they are genuinely interested in, leading to a genuine buy.”

He recognizes how important content is in capturing a user’s attention especially in today’s society where people’s attention can get so fragmented.

Like with any startup, he and his team have encountered some challenges along the way, but he’s realized the value of obstacles and how they help you grow your business. He says, “At first there was some stagnation as I tried to get people to work with me, but I’ve learned it’s okay to go slow and build a plan so that your business can be more successful in the long run.”

Alex has competed in several campus competitions coordinated by the LaunchPad and is excited to continue to showcase CIRUS and its capabilities.

To learn more about CIRUS visit its website.

Story by Jack Lyons ‘22, LaunchPad Global Fellow; photos and graphics supplied

Max Freund ’21 sees a more sustainable world world through the lens of his camera

student looking at the camera

In the rugged marshes and sultry heat of the Florida Everglades, a young boy named Max Freund takes pictures of everything he sees. In love with the rich beauty of nature he grew up surrounded in, he finds joy and fulfillment in capturing that beauty in the perfect shot or mesmerizing film.

Today, Max Freund ’21 studying Entrepreneurship and Emerging Enterprises in the Martin J. Whitman School of Management and Photography in the S.I. Newhouse School of Communications, has not lost that love for capturing beauty.  He is pursuing it as a full time career through his photography and filmography business, M. Freund Photography Productions.

Freund fell in love with photography at age nine as a creative escape from a world he didn’t naturally succeed at: school. Throughout his early school years, Freund struggled to perform well academically and found joy for himself in the wonder and exploration of the outside world and capturing what he saw in a frame.

When he was diagnosed with dyslexia and an auditory processing disorder in the sixth grade, Freund resisted the idea of working with tutors and teachers to overcome his learning disabilities and continue to learn effectively in the classroom.

His father decided to strike a deal with him. His father told him that he would buy Freund any camera he wanted as long as Freund agreed to work with his tutors and try to perform better in school. Naturally, photography lover that he was, Freund agreed and soon found his father taking him to a camera store to buy any camera he picked out.

“Dad took me to the camera store and said ‘you can pick any camera you want‘ and that was the deal. That was what grew passion and love for photography and allowed me to thrive in school, despite having the learning disabilities,” Freund said.

From then on, Freund and his camera were inseparable. His weekends were filled with taking pictures in the national forests or beaches.  Photography allowed him to devote his passion to what he cared about and then his focus to school. As he grew older, Freund decided to make a photography business out of his hobby and creative pursuit.

In 2015 Freund incorporated his photography business and began selling his photography services for events. Though nature photography was always his passion and being a National Geographic photographer his dream profession, Freund knew that he had to start where the demand was largest and went into event and portrait photography.

“Starting out was a very much optimistic mindset.  It was bootstrapping in that I set out to grow and work with clients,” said Freund of his early photography work.

From there Freund pursued photography as his career passion and dove into other realms of photography, including taking sports photography for the Daily Orange st Syracuse University.

Yet he always knew he wanted to take pictures of one thing only: nature.

For his family’s nature conservation foundation, the fStop Foundation, Freund began taking photography to raise awareness of the dual beauty and fragility of nature. “ 900 -1000 people move to Florida a day. As each person moves to Florida, that displaces green infrastructure.  Natural habitats are being taking over by humans and the built environment.“

One of the films Freund produced for fStop is currently being featured in an international film festival, and his new work includes a partnership with the Florida Wildlife Federation. Through his tenacity in pursuing what he has always truly loved, Freund has come from a teenager taking photos to make a name for himself to a business owner photographing and filming his passion.

This past week Freund won top prize in the Education and Well-Being category of the iPrize and Compete CNY competitions coordinated by the LaunchPad at Syracuse University.  He worked with the LaunchPad on his business model and pitch, and will now be taking his story to the finals of the New York Business Plan Competition next month.

Freund’s story of photography is a lifelong love story of a boy finding his place in the world and having the perseverance to pursue what he loved. From when taking pictures of the beauty he grew up in encouraged him to persevere in school to now when taking pictures to preserve nature’s refuges landed him international recognition, Freund’s continued determination to work for what he loved is a reminder to not back down in pursuit of what we find refuge in. 

By Claire Howard ’23, LaunchPad Global Fellow; photo supplied

Aanya Singh ‘21 seeks representation and encourages women to create their own communities in the fashion industry

Many titles can be put in front of Aanya Singh’s name — editor-in-chief for Icing Collective, president at the Fashion and Design Society at Syracuse University and a creative leader. All of her great work led to her nomination and honor in the list of 44 New Voices: Campus Voices at SU.

Newhouse’s 44 New Voices created a student edition to identify and amplify new and diverse student voices in media news, policy, public affairs and civic commentary on campus. Singh undoubtedly deserves this recognition because she has been on the path to seek representations of women and various cultures for a long time.

Born in Wisconsin, she spent her early life in Singapore, Tokyo and New Delhi. This floating background also immersed Singh into different cultures. Growing up, she is always interested in fashion and loves dressing up. During her middle school, she was in the after-school club called Passion for Fashion, which strengthened her idea to work in the fashion industry, even under the relatively conservative culture in India.

“I went to high school in India, a country that is conservative in terms of what women can wear as women try not to draw any negative attention to themselves standing out on the street,” Singh said. “But I always felt that fashion is a way to express myself, balancing wearing what I wanted while respecting the culture around me.”

This interest in self-expression and self-determination in fashion motivated Singh to major in studio art at the College of Visual and Performing Arts, and also study in the Fashion and Beauty Communications Milestone at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, and in the entrepreneurship and emerging enterprise (EEE) program at the Martin J. Whitman School of Management.

During her freshman year, Singh had trouble finding a student organization to affiliate with because there were not too many choices for her to demonstrate her great passion for fashion. Therefore, she decided to create her own magazine, Icing Collective, with a few friends.

Designed for the artistic young-adults who are transitioning into expressive, fashion-forward contributors, this magazine aims to play a part in the public creative collective by showcasing youth fashion, beauty, art and lifestyle.

“I hope to spotlight my creative community in Syracuse,” she said. “It’s not only a way for me to experiment with photography and styling but also a way for me to collaborate with a community to create a body of work that we are very proud of.”

Aanya at work on a photo shoot

Besides founding her own publication, Singh further expanded her engagement to more creative individuals. To her, coming into the U.S. as an international student was hard, and she was struggling at first to find a place that she could fit in. She then started to create her own community by getting involved in SU’s Fashion and Design Society, aka FADS, after noticing that the club was going to be revived after a long period of silence.

Singh took on the role of vice president during her freshman year and built up the departmental structure for it along with other core members. Starting with only eight people, FADS is now growing into a club with more than 120 people from different majors that are not limited to design or studio art.

After being promoted to the president position in her sophomore year, Singh has hosted four fashion shows over the past two years with different themes, including Body & Space, The Gallery, Night Circus and Tomorrowland. This year, they set the theme for the show as Revival, deconstructing 16th century’s regality with rebellious punk subculture influences.

“I’m so lucky to be a creative director of an organization and implement my own vision and style, which rebels from traditions and norms of cultures I grew up around to create something new entirely,” Singh said. “The theme reflects the renaissance we are currently seeing take place, the dismantling of archaic structures and views- people questioning norms and the world we knew is never going to be the same again.”

Singh currently works with and wants to make shout-outs to her fabulous Vice Presidents, Jessie Zhai and Emily Goldberg, who prepare this semester’s show planned for May. Working with these outstanding girls also made Singh realize how women in the real-world fashion industry are hardworking but may still face more difficulties.

The biggest problem she observed in the real world is that women can be very objectified only based on how they look, and this is super superficial, she said. She feels like that’s not what fashion is, and fashion should be the way of how people would like to express themselves, in her opinion. Because of these challenges, Singh thus encouraged all women to create their own opportunities and community just like what she has been doing on the SU campus.

“When things aren’t handed to you, you have to create your own spaces and communities that make you feel safe, Singh said. “The most important thing is to build a good strong support system and build other women up with you. We can do anything that we set our minds to, and it’s worth it to help each other succeed.”

Story by  Kaizhao Zero Lin, LaunchPad Global Media Fellow; photos supplied

Jules Moskowitz ’21 creates a successful fashion business in quarantine

student looking at the camera

For a lot of people, the pandemic was a time to completely unwind, grab a bag of popcorn and watch endless amounts of Netflix. Jules Moskowitz, a senior studying advertising with a minor in sociology, decided to do what many others didn’t, take initiative. Noticing a popular fashion trend, Moskowitz realized she could create a business around the collar under sweatshirt look that has been popular for the past year. She says, “I’ve always loved street style and have wanted to create my own fashion line.” So, she started her company, Unfolded, from her personal quarantine at her home in Essex, New Jersey.

Unfolded Shop is an e-commerce store offering high-quality, unique items.  The collar allows people to create a new look with items already in their wardrobe. Unfolded has the ability to transform and outfit by adding a timeless touch. No matter your age, job, or lifestyle, Unfolded suits everyone.

“It started out as really a trial-and-error experience,” Moskowitz says, “I started out trying on rugby shirts under sweatshirts and figuring out what fits the best.” Her persistent experimentation led her to create multiple prototypes. “It took three to four times to finally get it right.”

After a lot of prototyping and figuring out what would work best, Moskowitz released her product for the world to see. When she first started, she had 18 sales and around 200 followers on Instagram, but little did she know how her company would explode. After connecting with an influencer on TikTok, Moskowitz’s Unfolded collar was included on a TikTok that racked up 1.4 million views. “We sold out that night,” she says, “I received 700 emails from customers on when my products would get restocked and if they could get a special order. I even received orders from Italy and Australia.”

Having never taken a marketing or entrepreneurship course in her life, Moskowitz was a little overwhelmed with the massive number of orders. She says, “I needed to fulfill tons of orders and I didn’t know how to work the logistics as well as keep in contact with people in Asia and New York while still being a full-time student.” She credits her mom for helping her with shipping and packaging as well as her LaunchPad Rubin Family Innovation Mentor, James LePage, for helping with all the logistics, as well as the website’s backend technology and analytics. 

When asked about why she thinks Unfolded grew to the level it is at now, Moskowitz says, “I think people resonate with the hard work and effort put into the product and its design. People are willing to buy new things if the clothing is comfortable and versatile.”

She notes that the collared shirt under a sweatshirt is usually a “bulky look” but with her fitted product, it gives customers a sleeker, yet comfortable feel. 

Looking forward, Moskowitz would love to continue working on Unfolded and see where she can go with it or work for an influencer in the fashion industry.

Check out Unfolded website for more information about a truly unique and captivating fashion product.

Instagram product photo:

photo of a sweatshirt with a collar shirt underneath

Story by Jack Lyons ‘22, LaunchPad Global Fellow; photos and graphics supplied

Jack Harrington ’22, the producer behind the Syracuse DIY music scene

student sitting in a field with a soundboard

“When it comes to music it’s so easy to let your ego take the wheel and have it be my way or the highway,” says Jack Harrington, a junior studying sound recording technology at Syracuse University.  “But I think it’s one of my biggest strengths to listen to someone and not just have my opinion in mind.”

Harrington is a multi-instrumentalist, producer and mix engineer from Middletown, New Jersey.  He has received recognition across campus as one of the most talented musicians on campus, playing bass and piano in numerous bands including NONEWFRIENDS., Shallow Alcove and WinterBeach.

It has only been recently that Harrington has stepped into his new role as a producer for many up-and-coming artists in Syracuse.

“As a producer I basically take someone’s creative idea and serve as an assistant to help artists see their vision through.”

Harrington is producing for four different groups right now, including his two bands NONEWFRIENDS and Shallow Alcove.  He is also producing for solo artist Peter Groppe and for Katphunk, a funk fusion group from his hometown.

Additionally, he is also engineering for these groups which means he is not only producing the sound, but he is mixing and recording the actual songs as well. Harrington does this primarily from the comfort of his own room. He uses sound covers and mattresses to soundproof the walls and he can run up to 16 tracks into his own computer. 

“There are so many things that go into it how you record, and the process of producing gives the most life to a song other than the actually writing of it.  It’s tough though because the more that I believe in myself the less I believe in myself, as I get better at what I do the spectrum of how I feel about what I am making broadens, the bar is consistently being raised.”

This quote speaks to Jack’s drive and will to make the music the best he can make it. As far as where this will take him, Harrington is trying to take it one day at a time.

“I don’t know what the answer is. I don’t have a plan of how I am going to live on this, but I know I am going to figure it out.  Over the past couple years with producing and mixing I have become much more than just pianist or bassist.”

Follow Jack on Instagram and Soundcloud @jackharringtonworld

Story by Jackson Siporin ‘22, LaunchPad Global Fellow; photo supplied

Sam Cote ‘23 on not letting Instagram affect your creative output

It isn’t easy being a freelance photographer, illustrator, youtuber and to be writing your first novel. Enter Sam Cote. Sam Cote is a sophomore international relations and anthropology major who has gained attention on campus for his photography as well as illustration-based designs. He most recently has been focusing on his new YouTube channel which features lifestyle videos and shoe reviews as well as his fantasy novel.

“I definitely sometimes worry I am forgoing a lot of growth in favor of a wide breadth of smaller growth, but the idea of cutting out any of them is not an option for me, they all tend to different purposes and physiological needs.”

Sam Cote is from Hopkinton Massachusetts and has been a creative his whole life. He says that the first inspiration for this fantasy novel he is writing now came in 7th grade.


“Our school implemented this weird extra period at the end of everyday… we were supposed to do an activity but no one ever did. My friend just came up to me one time and said he invented this whole new language and we created this whole world around it.” 

Eight years later and that small spark in middle school has turned into a full-fledged story which Sam has created. Like many fantasy novels, not only is Sam tasked with writing the story but he also has a responsibility of building the world around the story. He has already created maps plotting the different geographical locations in the world as well as created different government entities and politics that exist within the book.

That being said, Sam is not looking to “Cheapen the whole effort” of the story, as he put it, by leaving the story hollow and just relying on the coolness of the world building.

Cote says the book has no timeline to being done and is still in the beginning stages.


Cote’s Instagram account @samtheminuteman has over 1500 followers and features his best photos. Recently Cote took a break from Instagram for the entire month of February. He continued to take his photos but didn’t post them on the account.


“I felt a conflict between the art I was creating and the modes of distribution” Said Cote. “My relationship with Instagram is worse than I thought… In the back of my head while I was taking photographs there was always will my followers like this? Does this match with everything else on my grid?… I needed to figure out how to distribute my photography in a way that doesn’t harm me.”


Cote said the month away from Instagram was good and he learned a lot about himself and how he makes his art. He is continuing the post regularly on YouTube and is now slowly getting back into posting pictures on Instagram in the healthiest way. 


To learn more about Sam and his experience check out his YouTube channel. The most recent video talks all about his opinions on art and Instagram and how he stayed away for a whole month!


YOUTUBE CHANNEL

https://www.youtube.com/c/SamCote

INSTAGRAM

https://www.instagram.com/samtheminuteman/


Story by LaunchPad Global Fellow Jackson Siporin ’22; photo supplied

Alec O’del ’22 marks a year of growth along with a year of the pandemic

As the pandemic has been upon us for a little over a year, there has been one constant throughout the chaos, fear. It is no secret that the collective mental health of millions across the globe has been on the decline. Isolation paired with a global pandemic not to mention the normal stresses of everyday life has people feeling overwhelmed and scared.

Growing up in a household with a psychologist, Alec O-del learned techniques early on how to help him cope with fear. O-del, a junior dual majoring in entrepreneurship in the Whitman School of Management and information management and technology at the iSchool, credits his mother as someone who made mental health a priority from an early age. He says, “My mom has always said you need to take care of your mental health and she helped me do this through breathing techniques, journaling, and just being honest with myself when I’m not feeling okay.”

O-del grew up as an entrepreneur, starting his own chocolate company when he was just ten years old, but as he grew older, he wanted to work with businesses that made an impact. Throughout high school he began working with organizations like the United Way and other nonprofit incubators but encountered a difficult dilemma as he realized that nonprofits were limited in reach because if they accumulate too much profit, they lose their non-profit status.

As he started his journey at Syracuse University, he became interested in social entrepreneurship. “Sure a business can make a profit, but they can also help people,” he says. 

O-del’s belief in business as a tool for social good drew him to SolaceVision where he now works as head of business development. “I think I do a good job of taking a step back and breaking down an idea so we can make it reality.”

Solace Vision helps people overcome phobias by immersing them in tailored virtual environments specific to each phobia. The company is a modern solution to helping phobia by providing a software platform with multiple tailored Virtual Reality environments for phobias and anxieties.

O-del recounts meeting SolaceVision CEO Shawn Gaetano through the Syracuse University LaunchPad’s Summer Startup accelerator program, “I really liked Shawn’s vision and saw he had strong technical and leadership skills that made me want to help in any way I can.” 

The company has gained traction through the NEXIS program offered in the iSchool and the LaunchPad, and it also secured funding through LaunchPad business competitions over the past year.  It also was one of the top companies in this year’s Global Student Entrepreneurship Award competition in the Western NY region. It was recently selected for a prestigious LaunchPad & Techstars spring fellowship program.

“I really like the direction the company is heading especially considering how, now more than ever, learning to improve mental health is so important.”

O-del sees the immense value of SolaceVision, even for himself. He says, “I can be shy at times and the idea of getting over public speaking and social anxiety is really great.” At the end of the day, he hopes potential customers realize that “mental health is real, and you should care about it. Maybe you don’t have to use our product, but we just hope that people can get the help they need.”

O-del’s fervent desire to make an impact and give back to the community is only matched by his tenacity and entrepreneurial spirit. 

If you want to learn more about SolaceVision and their mission, check out its LinkedIn page.

Story by LaunchPad Global Fellow Jack Lyons ’22; photo supplied

Elizabeth Stuart ’22, the lead singer for NONEWFRIENDS.

student looking into the camera

“I had never been in that position you know, it’s not a choir. It’s loud, it’s sweaty, it’s hot. While it’s happening, you’re blacked out. Before, you think so much about it and as soon as the set starts, I am put in a trance and in a different universe for 30 minutes.”  This is what a show feels like to vocalist Elizabeth Stuart ‘22. For most people, the closest they get to this experience is singing into a hairbrush or belting out a ballad in the shower. Elizabeth Stuart on the other hand is accustomed to a different life and is the perfect example of a modern rock star.

Elizabeth, or “Liz” as her friends and fans commonly call her, is multi-instrumentalist, singer songwriter and vocalist for the band NONEWFRIENDS. She plans to graduate from Syracuse with a degree in music industry from VPA and she has been singing since she was in 4th grade.

“I did a lot of classical stuff in the beginning. I didn’t do commercial singing until much later.” She admits that there were pros and cons to being brought up in a classical background. “It made me a better musician in a lot of ways, but my greatest downfall is that it’s hard to unlearn those things when I am trying to just be more free, you can get caught up in things sounding perfect but there gets a point when being technically perfect is not enough. If it doesn’t make you feel any type of way it doesn’t even matter.”   

Stuart is one of five members in NONEWFRIENDS, and the four are men. Being a female in a male dominated work space is sadly still far too common for many women. For Stuart it is even more of a challenge considering she is also the leader and vocalist.

“It’s tough because sometimes you feel discredited, but you have this obligation to still be the leader,” said Stuart. “It honestly can feel like you’re stuck between a rock and a hard place sometimes.

When asked what advice she had for other female artist in the industry she said, “Trust your fucking instincts and don’t be afraid to say what you’re thinking.  You don’t have to justify everything.  If you feel some type of way about something just say it. All the guys around me just say whatever the fuck they want, and honestly its empowering. If they can do it so can I.”

NONEWFRIENDS already has three singles out on Spotify amassing over 140,000 total streams, which for an indie band that formed only 2 years ago is a very solid start. They have been recording a project in their house this semester that is supposed to drop sometime over the summer.

“My ultimate goal for this band and the project is that after we graduate to gain a big enough following to go on tour, go on the road, maybe to Europe. Just keep playing, making content, making videos and feeling the love from other people.”  

NONEWFRIENDS just released a live recording of a cover of “It’s a Man’s World,” by James Brown. You can see it on their Instagram and/or YouTube page.

Band YouTube Page

Band’s Spotify

Band’s Instagram

Story by Jackson Siporin ‘22, LaunchPad Global Fellow; photo by Jackson Siporin