Showing posts with label fuqua. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fuqua. Show all posts

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Update on the Duke Start-Up Challenge: 110 Executive Summaries (plus 50 Alumni submissions)

Hi everyone,

The deadline for the Duke Start-Up Challenge: Executive Summary Competition closed last Thursday, February 10th. We had 110 different student teams enter, which we consider to be a pretty successful turnout.

Below are the statistics for the student competition are below:


Functional TrackSpring 2011Spring 2010
Energy & Environment1011
Health Care & Life Sciences1519
IT & Media3027
Products & Services3427
Social Enterprise2125
Total110109
Special Interest Tracks
Undergraduate Led (Special Int4341
Women Led (Special Interest Tr2729
Total7070
School (Team Lead)Spring 2011
Pratt46
Trinity29
Fuqua17
Law7
Graduate School4
Nicholas School2
Sanford2
Graduate School, Fuqua (PhD)1
Pratt and Trinity1
School of Medicine / DCI1
Sum110



In addition, we hosted our first annual "Alumni Track" (hosted by DukeGEN), inviting alumni startup teams to submit their entries for feedback (but not compete for the prize money). We had 50 entries (!) in our first year, and were pleased with that amount of participation.  More info here: http://www.dukegen.com/alumni-track

Other updates:
- Grand Prize money has been increased from $25,000 to $50,000 (thanks to Rich Lee, former CEO of Hosted Solutions)
- $10,000 Track prizes for Undergrad-led, Women-led, and Products & Services (misc) prizes.
- Our Finals judges will be:



- J.B. Pritzker '87 will be our keynote speaker at the Grand Finale on Friday April 8th

Thanks for your support.

Howie Rhee
Advisor to the Duke Start-Up Challenge

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Announcing the Duke Start-Up Challenge: Alumni Track



We are pleased to announce the creation of the Duke Start-Up Challenge:Alumni Track

All Duke alumni are invited to participate in the Duke Start-Up Challenge: Alumni Track, hosted by DukeGEN.  This is an opportunity for you to cultivate your startup idea and see what other members of Duke's entrepreneurial community think about it. The first step is to submit a two-page document describing your idea, due on Thursday, February 10th at 5pm ET.  Feedback will be provided to everyone that submits an idea.  At that point, the top 40 ideas will be selected, and invited to complete a business plan and investor pitch, presented via Skype in March.  The best teams will be recognized and announced on DukeGEN. 


When: This spring
  • Executive Summaries Due: February 10, 2011 at 5pm ET
  • Finalists Selected: February 24, 2011
  • Investor Pitches presented via Skype: March 23, 2011
Where: Done virtually
Hosted by the Duke Global Entrepreneurship Network (DukeGEN)
Open to all startups led by Duke alumni
Cost: Free

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Shopping for Gifts from Duke alumni-led startups

It's that time of year again, when many people are looking for gifts for family and friends.
We did a quick analysis of Duke alumni-led startups that sell gifts, and found a number of good ones.

Looking for a gift from a Duke alumni-led startup?

Check out:
-Howie


Thursday, November 4, 2010

Day 2 of the Duke Start-up Challenge Elevator Pitch Competition: Undergrad-led Startups Track

29 Duke University undergraduate-led start-up teams pitched their business ideas tonight at the second sequential day of the Elevator Pitch Competition. From a company designed to pay users for watching commercials to a high tech firm promising batteries made from bones, diverse, innovative, and intriguing company concepts were presented before a live audience and judges - each team vying for a spot to compete at the Elevator Pitch Finals with Greylock Partners. The Elevator Pitch Finals competition will be held on November 12th at Fuqua, and the entire Duke community is invited to attend. That night, each of the two winners from the 8 tracks of enterprises will be allowed to compete for the $5000 cash prize selected by the judges and a $1500 audience choice prize which will be selected by the viewers using live text message voting.


Live from Duke University
Hosted live by Vidhan Agrawal (Pratt’12) and Dovina Qu (Pratt ’12) at Duke University’s Bryan Center, each of the 29 competing start-up teams were given exactly 1 minute to convince the judges why their company deserves to be funded with a seed round of investment capital. Judging the event was a panel of seasoned start-up business professionals: 

  • Justin Klein ’99, MD ‘06 – Principal at NEA Venture Partners
  • Doug Eisner ’07 – Co-founder and COO of Grassroots Bio
  • Taylor Mingos ’07 – Founder and CEO of Shoeboxed.com. 
  • Matt Kane '06 - Co-founder and CEO of Precision Biosciences
  • Jon Fjeld '90 - Executive Director, Fuqua Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation

Competition among the teams was tight. Well prepared pitches and passionate pleas for funding heightened the excitement of the evening’s already electric, entrepreneurial atmosphere.






Undergraduate-led Startup Track Contestants
For this track the rule was: "Whoever is pitching must be an undergrad, and the same people pitching in this track must pitch in all other tracks and in the Finals."

Tonight’s competitors were:

Track 1

  1. Auris Ingenum
  2. Airmart
  3. Gebshed
  4. inCadence
  5. Yoh Show
  6. CarBone
  7. Corona Enterprises
  8. Askapade
  9. Smart Shot
  10. EnergySync
  11. Pocket Blue Light
  12. HeyCouldYa.com (formerly Emom.com)
  13. Winyata
  14. ClearBolus

Track 2
  1. InterestIn
  2. Nooch
  3. The Ujamaa Project
  4. FriendCal
  5. Pure Hair Salon
  6. ShelfRelief.com
  7. Connectwork
  8. Golden Diamond Mansion Certification
  9. Mufu
  10. AdApt
  11. time2work
  12. TheRushie
  13. Advisync
  14. Scribblit
  15. Smarticles

Each Track produced an:
  • Audience Choice Winner
  • Judge's Choice Winner
  • and a Judge's Choice Runner-up
In addition, a Best Freshmen-led Team* prize was awarded.



The Winners

The winners of the audience choice awards were HeyCouldYa.com (formerly Emom.com) and ShelfRelief.com.
  • HeyCouldYa.com (formerly Emom.com) is a network connecting students in need of college-related favors/assistance to students willing to oblige for a reasonable price.
  • ShelfRelief is a website startup that asks "Are you tired of paying hundreds of dollars for books and getting just a few bucks when you sell them back? Let us solve the problem for you."
The Judges' Choice for the overall winners of the Undergraduate-led start-up track were Askapade and Nooch.

  • Askapade is a Q&A platform that makes it easier and more fun to ask your friends for help.
  • Nooch is a revolutionary new Peer-to-Peer Money Transfer System. Web-based design will utilize social media and cell phones to allow quicker, easier and cheaper transactions. Immediate access to funds and low fees and will attract a wide range of users.

inCadence and ShelfRelief.com were the Judges' Runner-ups in their respective tracks.

  • inCadence forges entirely new perspectives of the physical world through seamless on-locale augmented reality delivered on mobile platforms.


Both the Judges' Choice winners and Audience Choice winners will advance to the Elevator Pitch Finals event on November 12th at Duke University featuring Greylock Partners. Congratulations winners!

* To encourage freshmen to participate, we created a Best Freshmen-led Team prize of $150. We had four freshmen teams (who, randomly assigned, were all competing in Track 2). So as not to bias the judges, we did not tell them about this prize beforehand. In the case that no Freshman-led team was awarded points in the judging process, we were going to ask the judges independently to select a Freshmen-led Team prize winner. As it turned out, Scribblit received points in the judging process and was awarded the prize. 


Scribblit is "a textual (with optional integration of picture/sound/video within text) media-sharing website where users can read, create, and share original content for free. "


Congratulations, Scribblit.

Pictures of tonight's event can be found here: http://picasaweb.google.com/hwr2duke/Day2OfTheElevatorPitchCompetition2010DukeStartUpChallenge#
(Thanks to Olgun Kukrer '12, and Tim Canavan '12)

Posted by Trevor Scott, edited by Howie Rhee '04

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

5th Annual Elevator Pitch Competition begins, part of the Duke Startup Challenge Elevator Pitch Competition

The 5th Annual Elevator Pitch Competition, hosted by the Duke Start-Up Challenge commenced with an eventful round of pitches from the Women-led startups track and the Social Enterprises track. Hosted by Meghan Gallagher (Fuqua ’11) and Jonathan Lee (Fuqua '11) at the Fuqua School of Business, 20 student teams pitched their startup ideas to mark the first day of competition among aspiring entrepreneurs throughout Duke University.

Summary of the Competition:
The 2010-2011 Duke Startup Challenge Elevator Pitch Competition begins with student entrepreneurs divided among 8 different qualifying tracks, competing in front of a live audience and a live panel of experienced judges. Each team has exactly one minute to pitch their business idea before the judges, and receive one question from the judges. At the conclusion of each qualifying track event, 2 Finalist teams are be selected to compete at the Elevator Pitch Finals with Greylock Partners on November 12th, 2010, hosted in Geneen Auditorium at the Fuqua School of Business, where they will be able to compete for a cash prize of $5000, selected by the judges, and an audience choice prize of $1500, selected via text-messaging.

More information can be found at: http://www.dukestartupchallenge.org/2010-2011/epc

Summary of the Women-Led Start-ups Track
Tonight marked the commencement of the Women-Led Start-ups Track, the second year of this track, meant to encourage women from across campus to be entrepreneurial. It was a strong showing. Teams were led by students from across Duke University and featured pitches by:
-Complete Makeover
-Expressions
-Bubble Tea Factory
-Pure Salon
-Street Snacks
-Asteria Propulsion
-Innovation Education International
-dreamPl8
-The Morph Purse
-TheRushie
-K Kane
-Scribblit
Our judges were Sarah Kate Fishback '09, Liliana Valle '09, and Nancy Zeleniak.

The Winners:
While the judges deliberated over their choice of a winner, host Meghan Gallagher directed the audience to the secure text-message voting system to determine the Audience Choice Award.

From the judges, the runner-up of the Women-led Start-up Track was Street Snacks and the overall winner was DreamPl8. And, after the audience's text-messaging votes were tallied, the winner of the Audience Choice Award was Bubble Tea Factory.

Both dreamPl8 and Bubble Tea Factory will advance to the Elevator Pitch Finals on November 12th with Greylock Partners.

dreamPL8 is an online food review website dedicated to helping consumers with diverse foodstyles find food vendors that can meet their needs and wants in their own community.

Bubble Tea Factory's goal is "Introducing Bubble Tea to the Netherlands: A fun, exotic and classic Taiwanese drink"

K Kane is a fine jewelry line whose pieces are as unique as the individuals who wear them. Dissatisfied with the monogram jewelry on the market several years ago, founder Kate Kane designed and handcrafted a pendant featuring her initials. When friends and strangers repeatedly asked for similar pieces, Kate realized that she was on to something. The economic downturn has caused consumers to be significantly more mindful of their discretionary investments, which has translated into more considered purchasing and gifting with a mind towards timelessness, quality and emotional significance. The unifying factor behind K Kane designs is personalization. While K Kane “signature pendants” currently allow Kate to grow her business on a highly customized level requiring very little start-up capital, the next step is “jeweled poetry,” a jewelry play on Magnetic Poetry that allows customers to build phrases of significance to them out of golden words – eventually available in several languages and fonts – and add these words to sophisticated chains and bracelets.



Pictures of tonight's event can be found here:

-Written by Trevor Scott, edited by Howie Rhee

---------------
Summary of the Social Enterprises Track

Tonight we had 8 great pitches in Social Enterprises Track

Our judges were:
- Bill Stevenson ‘96, Formerly Director of Social Investments at Lenovo
- Al Huntoon, Founder and CEO, Catalyst Consulting Services
- Keith Artin ‘99, COO of TROSA

The Winners:
Advancing to the finals event are WETOA the judges choice and TheRushie the audience choice.
Scribblit was selected as the judges runner-up.


WETOA stands for Women's Empowerment Through Outdoor Adventure and is provides women aged 30 to 60 with the opportunity to adventure in the outdoors and revitalize their mental and physical potential.

TheRushie is a "Social Network and Magazine for young Christian women

Scribblit is a textual (with optional integration of picture/sound/video within text) media-sharing website where users can read, create, and share original content for free.




A big thank you to all of our judges and competitors!

Don't forget to come to the Elevator Pitch Finals with special guest speaker David Thacker '97, of Greylock Partners, one of the top venture capital firms in the world. Investors in Facebook, LinkedIn, Pandora, etc... on Friday, Nov 12 @ Fuqua, Geneen Auditorium, 5:30pm Networking Event, 7:30pm Finals

Free vuvuzelas for everyone in attendance.

See http://www.dukestartupchallenge.org/2010-2011/epc/finals for more details.

Pictures of tonight's event can be found here:

- Written by Tim Canavan '12

Friday, April 3, 2009

Entrepreneurship & Innovation during Blue Devil Weekend

Well, Blue Devil Weekend 2009 is here.

Here's the schedule for those of you that are flying in.  Look forward to meeting everyone.

-Howie

Entrepreneurship & Innovation during Blue Devil Weekend
Friday, April 3, 2009
Office Hours – Kirby Reading Room
• 3:00 - 4:00pm - A chance to informally meet us and some students. Location: Kirby Reading Room. We'll have office hours jointly with the Center for the Advancement of Social Entrepreneurship, the Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, and the Corporate Sustainability Initiative
Program for Entrepreneurs Workshop – Lilly Classroom
• 4:00 – 4:30pm – Information session on the Program for Entrepreneurs. Chat with Jon, Howie and others about the Program for Entrepreneurs. Note: Admitted students that specified an interest in Entrepreneurship and Innovation have received information about this program.
• 4:30pm - 6:15pm - Entrepreneurship Workshop for Program for Entrepreneurs applicants. Present your analysis of the case study for students wanting to apply for our Program. By invitation. Note: All slots are currently taken
Activities Fair - Tables for the EVCC and Program for Entrepreneurs
• 7:15pm-9:15pm - The Duke MBA Activities Fair - Location: Kirby Winter Gardens
• Table 1: For the Entrepreneurship and Venture Capital Club (EVCC) - (our fantastic student club, nominated for Club of the Year 2009)
• Table 2: For the Program for Entrepreneurs – special program for students intending to start a company upon graduation - a chance to meet students in the Program for Entrepreneurs. Note: Admitted students that specified an interest in Entrepreneurship and Innovation have received information about this program.

Saturday, April 4, 2009
Academic Preview – Entrepreneurship and Innovation - Rand Classroom
Do a Case Study with Prof. Aaron (Ronnie) Chatterji. We’ll also take questions about the courses in Entrepreneurship and Innovation.
• 10:05-11:05 – Location: Rand Classroom – Academic Preview 1
• 11:10-12:10 – Location: Rand Classroom – Academic Preview 2
Career Panels – Entrepreneurship, VC & PE - Rand Classroom
Two sessions, same career panel each time. They will be preceded by a general CMC overview in Geneen Auditorium from 1:15pm - 1:45pm.
• 1:50 - 2:45pm – Location: Rand Classroom - Entrepreneurship, VC & PE - Career Panel A (a mix of students and alums)
• 2:50 - 3:45pm – Location: Rand Classroom - Entrepreneurship, VC & PE - Career Panel B (a mix of students and alums)
Open House–Center for Entrepreneurship & Innovation–Leaman Classroom
The Open House is a chance to meet the Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation - see an overview of entrepreneurship and innovation activities at Fuqua and Duke, and chat informally with some current students.
• 4:35 - 5:15pm – Location: Leaman Classroom - Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation - Open House slot 1
• 5:20 - 6:00pm – Location: Leaman Classroom - Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation - Open House slot 2

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Vish Misra speaking at Duke at the India Business Forum

The Duke India Business Forum is coming to Duke on March 22, 2009.
Looks like it will be a good program: www.dukeibf.com

Karthik Meda is one of the organizers. He writes:
"For the Entrepreneurship track, we will be hosting Mr. Vish Mishra ( Senior Venture Partner at Clearstone Ventures ). Vish has spoken previously on Entrepreneurship in India, at other conferences namely Harvard and Wharton and he is a very thoughtful speaker. He is also one of the founder members of  the TiE(The Indus Entrepreneurs) organization. You can view Vish's full profile here:http://www.clearstone.com/content/html/about-team-profile.htm?a=8. "




Thursday, February 26, 2009

Good story about Duke alums Robert Fuqua and Vincent Hsieh

Recently had a chance to connect with Vincent Hsieh - and thought his story was worth sharing.  This is a re-post from a Fuqua Exchange (alumni magazine) article from 2007.

-Howie


http://www.fuqua.duke.edu/exchange/fall_2007/alumni/alumniprofile2.html


A Dream Realized

Vincent Hsieh - Robert Fuqua
Vincent Hsieh ’07
The Duke MBA—Cross Continent
Vice President, Business Development
Atlas RFID Solutions, Inc.

Robert Fuqua ’07
The Duke MBA—Cross Continent President and CEO
Atlas RFID Solutions, Inc.

With support from their professor and classmates, two Cross Continent grads launch the company they’ve always dreamed of—and aim to lead an emerging tech field

The CEO did a simple calculation. Each year, their warehouse shuts down for six days to count inventory. Each day, the company does $1.2 million in sales.

“So we’re losing $7.2 million counting inventory every year,” he stated.

And that’s when Vincent Hsieh, co-founder and VP for business development at Atlas RFID Solutions, Inc. (www.atlasRFIDsolutions.com), knew this CEO had seen the value of RFID (Radio Frequency IDentification) technology—and that Atlas had a new client.

It’s the kind of moment Hsieh and his fellow co-founder Robert Fuqua, President and CEO of Atlas, envisioned when they met in The Duke MBA—Cross Continent program’s Class of 2007, hit it off, and decided to start a company together.

In Operations Management, taught by Dr. Paul Zipkin, the two men learned about RFID technology and how it was being used in supply chain management. RFID uses radio waves to automatically identify people or objects. RFID tags can be read from a distance. Tag your inventory and track everything you own at the touch of a computer button. Hospitals can tag defibrillators and stretchers and locate them instantaneously. RFID is also great for tracking IT assets such as laptop computers and printers. The potential is limitless.

Although RFID technology has been around for decades, in the past two years its application has developed rapidly. Fuqua and Hsieh knew if they could get started now, they could position Atlas to be an industry leader when things really exploded.

“Vince and I both had visions of building a great company and how we’d want that company to look,” said Fuqua, who is a distant relative of the business school’s founder. “We saw that RFID would be the technology of the future, and this was a product we could build that company around.”

They started planning their new business, even as they continued their Cross Continent program and their full-time jobs: Fuqua as VP of Business Development for a pharmaceutical marketing firm and Hsieh managing the capital-raising group at a biotech. They enlisted Professor Zipkin as a senior industry advisor to “keep an eye on the forest while we are amongst the trees.” They meet with him monthly for industry updates, and having Zipkin on board has helped give the company immediate credibility.

Hsieh and Fuqua raised capital from twenty-three investors, including ten Cross Continent classmates. “Someone described Atlas as ‘the class project,’ because we feel like it’s our baby,” said Hsieh. “People have invested, advised us, or introduced us to potential clients, including in Dubai and China. You wouldn’t get those connections at most other MBA programs.”

By July 2006, Fuqua and Hsieh realized that if this new company was really going to happen, one of them needed to jump in full-time. So Fuqua quit his job and devoted himself to the new enterprise. Hsieh followed in November. Atlas bridges the gap between firms developing RFID technology and end users that stand to benefit from it. Hundreds of companies develop the various components of an RFID system. Atlas partners with the best and uses their technologies as a platform to develop, integrate, and maintain customized solutions for clients.

The company began fully operating in January 2007, even as the two men were completing the Cross Continent program. Atlas now has twelve employees: three with Hsieh in New York, the rest with Fuqua in Birmingham, Alabama. Already, they are working with clients in ten states and in Canada, and have built partnerships with technology developers in the U.S. and five other countries.

The biggest surprise so far, said Fuqua, is that they’ve been able to talk to more— and large—potential customers and gotten further in conversations than they’d expected at this stage. On the downside, the sales cycle is longer than anticipated. “Adoption is always an issue with an emerging technology. Our challenge is to change customers’ perception of RFID from a ‘nice to have’ to a ‘need to have.’ As more companies adopt this technology, it’s becoming a ‘need to have’ in order to compete, and the sales cycle will decrease.”

Another business challenge has been finding top-quality people to join their team. “We’re proactively looking for the most talented people we can find, and we’ll do what we can to bring them on board,” commented Hsieh. “It’s challenging at the beginning, because this is a start-up and obviously security is a question. But we’re overcoming that, and we’ve hired exceptional talent.”

The Cross Continent program gave them insight into hiring, building effective project teams, and creating incentive programs. It also taught them how to communicate effectively in a dispersed environment— something that has proven vital with the team split between New York and Alabama.

And said Fuqua, “Being in a global business program and meeting people from different parts of the world really changed my perspective on how we can do business internationally. I’d always dreamed of building a great company domestically, but I’m grateful to the program for teaching me to think globally.”

“Between the two of us, we invested $180,000 to go to Duke,” Hsieh noted. “We got our ROI back before we even graduated, in terms of investors, suppliers, potential clients, advisers, our education—and even meeting each other. Anything in the future is icing on the cake.”

Fall 2007