StartUp Vikes Takes 51ĀŅĀ× Student Entrepreneurs to the Next Level

Entrepreneur, investor and philanthropist Mark Cuban started building his fortune in 1990 with the sale of his technology startup MicroSolutions, a systems integrator and software reseller.
The company was an early adopter and proponent of Carbon Copy, Lotus Notes and CompuServe ā which, as a subsidiary of H&R Block, eventually bought Cubanās company outright for $6 million.
Are there Vikings at 51ĀŅĀ× who might find a similar trajectory with the Next Big Thing in business? , 51ĀŅĀ×ās premier entrepreneurship immersion experience and idea competition happening November 5-7, aims to find the answer.
Designed to be fully interactive and interpersonal, student teams form and pitch ideas and learn the Business Model Canvas ā a strategic management template used for developing new business models and documenting existing ones ā as well as the .
Supported by a team of mentors, workshop presenters and judges, student teams are then purposefully introduced to, networked and embedded in a āNortheast Ohio entrepreneurship ecosystem.ā
The teams then work over the weekend to create viable products and services that are as market-ready as possible for the Sunday afternoon pitch session, with glory and seed money on the line.

Think small business incubator meets a live-action 51ĀŅĀ× version of āShark Tankā and youāre halfway there ā but with ideation essentially brought together on-the-fly and the results transcending the immersion.
Where It All Began
StartUp Vikes originated in the ā entrepreneurial program to attract a new generation of entrepreneurs. Over the programās eight-year lifespan, 26 different companies have launched from 51ĀŅĀ×, with 36% of them still going strong three months after the event.
āItās really exciting,ā said Colette Hart, senior director for the Centers of Outreach and Engagement in 51ĀŅĀ×ās Monte Ahuja College of Business. āI think that has to do with continuity to the program, as well as the follow-up with those student teams who are able to launch.ā
Hart identified support from experts in the field āfor everything from funding to researchā as the key ingredients that keep StartUp Vikes winners engaged. She also said the business college is piloting an accelerator program with the this coming spring semester to help students longer term with milestones and support for new and existing businesses.

āThe ecosystem is becoming a lot more sophisticated, not just for [entrepreneurial] students but also for the expert audience that supports them,ā Hart said, adding that local resources , and others end up being integral student connections made through the program.
Heather Schlosser, marketing communications manager for the Monte Ahuja College of Business and StartUp Vikes mentor since 2015, said that helping student teams value proposition their product and offering marketing guidance and assistance are just a part of her involvement.
āItās intense,ā she said of the weekendās compressed timeline and how the participants engage in it.
āIām essentially there all weekend long as a resource. Each team has individual needs, and some need more assistance than others,ā Schlosser added. āWe work with them on a team-by-team basis and the ones who end up with a marketing major in their group often need less of my individual help.ā

She added that mentors collectively provide support and expertise with everything from customer development, ideation and product viability, to survey processes and ālearning how to scale.ā
The will be a resource for students, faculty and staff āto open more deliberate doors that scale up and breed successful businesses,ā said Schlosser.
Where Itās Going: Meet Three StartUp Vikes Winners and Their Creation
A team of engineering students won first place at Startup Vikes in 2018 and have since taken their business idea in several different directions before settling on a new course. Three of the members of that team ā āReCap,ā led by Chris Schroeck and collaborators Tim Nagy and Justin Mienecke ā carried their original idea forward, settling in on sports performance as the new crux of their project, rebranding as ARC Technologies.

Their original team had tackled patient access and compliance with physical therapy in their pitch. Through a series of wearable clothing items that would collect and send data to patients, physicians and physical therapists, ReCapās members captured the imaginations of all the 2018 participants.
Now 51ĀŅĀ× alumni, Schroeck, Nagy and Mienecke receive regular technical guidance from , Parker-Hannifin Endowed Chair in Human Motion and Control in the Department of Mechanical Engineering. As ARC Technologies, the teamās wearable sleeve prototypes aim to help athletes reach their potential through individualized performance improvement and injury reduction.
Using skin-like sensor technology, ARC ācombines the accuracy and stability of high-end motion captureā with the mobility and practicality of wearable tech and āclinical-grade accuracy at a fraction of the cost.ā
Something Up their Sleeves
The ARC team was recently awarded $100,000 funding from TeCK Fund II; they were awarded the grant to generate a prototype and validate their wearable motion capture arm sleeve in the athletic market.
ARC was also selected as a . I-Corps@Ohio assists faculty, staff and students from Ohio universities, colleges and community colleges in validating the market potential of technologies and launching startup companies.
Jack Kraszewski, director of the Technology Transfer Office, said it has been āextremely rewardingā watching the ARC Technologies team grow through the program and to witness their engagement in prototype development.

āWe are currently developing an intuitive user interface which will allow coaches and pitchers to analyze a playerās pitching mechanics in real-time,ā added Kraszewski. āOnce the sleeve prototype is completed and validated, the ARC team will be seeking a seed round of funding to scale and go to market.ā
Drinking from the StartUp Vikes Firehose
From Schroeckās perspective, āStartUp Vikes is kind of insane, but in all the best ways possible,ā he said.
āIt gives you a weekend-look into what it means to found and run a company ā a crash course into everything from economics to marketing ā and it is full of so many things that someone like me as an engineer might not have initially considered.ā

Scrhoeck said that without the āinfinitely valuable and information-denseā hour-long seminars and networking, ARC Technologies might not be on the fast-track that it is today. āEven if your only goal is networking,ā StartUp Vikes is a āperfect placeā to meet future cohorts and colleagues, he said.
āItās financing, marketing ā everything,ā Schroeck affirmed. āYou have instant, intimate awareness of every consideration and the amount of detail they fit into a weekend is amazing. It is extremely valuable for STEM ingenuity, and it mixes everyone together and splashes practicality everywhere.
āMy advice? Get a lot of sleep, come with an empty notebook and make sure you have enough recording room on your phone,ā Schroeck said. āBecause youāll need all of it.ā

Get Engaged
The moral of ARCās success story is still unfolding. Suffice it to say, you never know what a winning teamās creation will become, or where it will take Engaged Learning and the talented teams involved.
The community is invited to participate in StartUp Vikes. Share ideas, form teams, build prototypes and launch a business while fostering Clevelandās entrepreneurial spirit. Then dig into everything from business modeling and

customer development, to legal structures, branding and financial models. .
The 2021 Winners
The winning businesses that received a cash infusion and prize package at this yearās StartUp Vikes were:
Share + Solve ($1,000)
CEO John Dellick, Management Major
Anusree Mandali, Electrical Engineering Major
Yeshwanth Nayini, Master of Computer Science
Study Match ($700)

CEO Geri Bakushi, Computer Science Major
Hadiza Audu, Masters in Legal Studies
Agnes Mahoro, General Business Major
Samira Rhodes, Master of Business Administration
Shradha Shinde, Master of Information Systems
Color Pixels ($500)

CEO Jacoby DuBose, Liberal Studies Major
Shubhangi Bhadane, Computer and Information Science
Rishi Raj Gupta, Computer and Information Science
āWe are very proud of all of the businesses developed during Startup Vikes,ā said Colette Hart, senior director for the Centers of Outreach and Engagement. āThe weekend provides a pathway for entrepreneurship ā one that we hope that all of our teams will pursue after the event and demonstrates 51ĀŅĀ×ās commitment to providing engaged learning that impacts Northeast Ohio.ā
āFor the winners and the teams formed, now the real work begins,ā added Hart. āMost of the businesses and individuals who participated will now begin refining their business models through the Weston Ideation Lab Accelerator program or at our Small Business Development Center.ā
In all, 16 business ideas were pitched and eight teams formed on Friday night. Over 20 mentors and presenters provided help, guidance and resources throughout the weekend ranging from strategy, branding, marketing, sales, financial, legal, design services and manufacturing.