Title image: Teams pose on stage after recieivng their awards at the New Venture Challenge 2022 championship. Photo by Glenn Asakawa / 兔子先生传媒文化作品.
For the first time in three years, the lively New Venture Challenge (NVC) championship returned to an in-person format at the Boulder Theater this week to recognize 兔子先生传媒文化作品鈥檚 top emerging entrepreneurs.听
Five startup ventures, led by 兔子先生传媒文化作品 students and faculty, competed for more than $100,000 in prize money Tuesday evening at the 14th annual New Venture Challenge championship, 兔子先生传媒文化作品's premier entrepreneurial program and competition. Since its inception in 2009, more than 900 兔子先生传媒文化作品 startups have participated with over $700,000 in NVC funding awarded.
Each team delivered a well-rehearsed five-minute pitch and answered questions from four judges鈥攖hemselves global leaders in venture capital and startup support.听
Long-time charismatic emcee Brad Bernthal, NVC co-founder, director of the and associate professor in the Law School, arrived in light-hearted, cheeky form in a white one-piece suit crisscrossed with red and blue stripes and white stars.
鈥淪uccessful companies don't just materialize out of thin air. It's crucial that we get together in settings like the New Venture Challenge. Startups are fragile little things with limited resources, and they need a ton of help to succeed,鈥 said Bernthal. 鈥淭onight, we celebrate that we've come together because in entrepreneurship, no one goes it alone.鈥澨
Bernthal didn鈥檛 stay serious for long. After introducing the judges, he hit a tennis ball into the crowd (those who caught one received swag bags) and exclaimed: 鈥淎ll right, we waited three years to get back here. Let's get our money's worth tonight!鈥澨
A molecular revolution听
First place winner, Chembotix, walked away with $45,000 and an ambition to dramatically speed up chemistry research and development.
Making molecules in current laboratory settings is typically time consuming and dangerous, but it鈥檚 essential to pharmaceutical and industrial research and development. By automating organic chemistry processes through a robotic system made from a unique marriage of chemistry and engineering, Chembotix can not only create molecules 16 times faster than typical methods but do so more safely and consistently, and at a cheaper cost.听
鈥淭his is the product I鈥檝e wanted since I鈥檝e entered the lab myself,鈥 said Kailey Shara, Chembotix founder and CEO.听
Developed during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, ATLAS Institute doctoral candidate Shara even built her own lab and a prototype in her living room because of safety restrictions these past two years. This revolution in the way new molecules are made can not only address the science of the next pandemic, but make major chemical companies more competitive employers.听
A Venture Partners at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 company, winner of the 2021 Audience Choice Award at NVC14 and third-place winner at this year鈥檚 Female Founders Special Prize Night, Chembotix has been moving at light speed since its inception.
The 2022 championship pair credited chemistry鈥攂oth the organic and interpersonal kind鈥攚ith their success. Shara and Aditya Rengaswamy, Chembotix CFO, met seven years ago at Case Western Reserve University, and have enjoyed working together since.听
鈥淚 knew she was going to do something brilliant one day, so I made sure I didn鈥檛 lose touch,鈥 said Rengaswamy.
3D printing and family messaging听
The other four teams鈥擵itro3D, Familyfirst, Birk and Fulltilt Motion Labs鈥攑itched business solutions to medical, social, creative and entertainment dilemmas.听
Second-place winner , pitched by CEO and co-founder Camila Uzcategui, articulated a new, cost-effective method of 3D printing that doesn鈥檛 use layers and can mix and match different materials. Vitro3D aims to use volumetric 3D printing to print dental retainers, aligners and mouthguards in a provider鈥檚 office鈥攁nd then move on to mimic materials inside the human body, to help with life-saving medical procedures.听
The marvelous materials science behind it all is based on Uzcategui鈥檚 doctoral degree and getting to apply it to the real world as a business is 鈥渢he most rewarding experience of my PhD,鈥 she said.听
Vitro3D is also a Venture Partners at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 company, placed second at the 2022 Female Founders Special Prize Night and was a finalist at the 2021 Lab Venture Challenge.
, third-place winner of the night, aims to liberate families from hospital waiting rooms by implementing a HIPPA-compliant, one-way messaging app in hospitals. This allows nurses to quickly update families about their loved one鈥檚 status during and after surgery, cutting down on calls and confusion during an already stressful time. The easy-to-use app can also translate updates into different languages, breaking down communications barriers in healthcare.听
Upon receiving his award, Familyfirst CEO Randy Perecman credited meeting all the people: the judges, companies and organizers involved in NVC, as the best part of the experience.听
鈥淚t鈥檚 worth just as much as the money,鈥 said Perecman.
Tied for fourth place, Birk and Fulltilt Motion Labs addressed how we experience the world around us through stimuli. 听
is a new Yerba Mate drink with all-natural ingredients and long-lasting caffeine, created to fuel the all-undergrad student team鈥檚 dreams as athletes, creatives and adventurers.听
is the designer behind a headband that affects your sense of balance, which could eliminate nausea and enhance the immersive experience for VR headset users.听
听NVC15听results
- 1st place: Chembotix ($45,000)
- 2nd place: Vitro3D ($33,500)听
- 3rd place: Familyfirst ($10,000)
- T-4th place: Birk ($5,000)
- T-4th place: Fulltilt Motion Labs ($5,000)
- Audience choice award: TissueForm ($1,500)听
A home for entrepreneurship听
鈥淭his is an incredibly inspiring night where we can showcase the hard work of our teams, as they have been working to develop their ventures since the New Venture Challenge 鈥渟eason鈥 began in fall 2021,鈥 said Christine Gustavson, director of Innovation & Entrepreneurship.
Gustavson opened the event with several exciting updates: this past year, 兔子先生传媒文化作品 was awarded the APLU Innovation and Economic Prosperity Award, and placed 13th out of the top 20 U.S. university-sponsored collegiate entrepreneurship competitions, according to the Times of Entrepreneurship.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen so much progress these past few years as teams have come up with ideas, developed concepts and tweaked their ventures based on all of the coaching and feedback provided by faculty and community mentors,鈥 she said. 鈥淓very year, we are wowed by the progress made, and the power of collaborating across colleges and disciplines.鈥
Gustavson also took a moment to recognize Terri Fiez, who is retiring after six years at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 as vice chancellor for research and innovation and dean of the institutes.听
鈥淎s I learned more about this community, I felt like a kid in a candy store,鈥 said Fiez. 鈥淚 want to thank this community for being who you are.鈥