Bomb Detector, Game System

       Win Business Awards

    

      Organizers Say Student Ideas Rival Professional

                  Venture Plans in Sophistication

Dec. 3, 2009

A scanning device to detect car bombs and a

system for hosting online video-game contests

took top honors at this year's UT Dallas

Business Idea Competition.

The third annual competition, sponsored by

the Institute for Innovation and

Entrepreneurship at UT Dallas, drew

entries from 45 graduate and undergraduate

teams, who vied for $30,000 in scholarships

and cash prizes.

"We were pleased by the level of participation

and the quality of the ideas in this year's

competition," IIE competition director and

School of Management faculty member Daniel

Bochsler observed. "The 114 students in the

competition included representatives from

every school at UT Dallas."

MBA students Adam Rivon and Swapnil Bora

took home the top prize in the graduate

division for MS3-Modern Security, an electronic

surveillance system to scan the underside of

vehicles to detect bombs. Continuing concerns

about terrorism create a need for the product,

Bora and Rivon said. The pair won $6,500 for

placing first and $500 more for making the best

idea presentation. The team can use the money

to help turn the idea into an actual business

venture."We'll need to raise about $360,000

to get started," Rivon said.

"There are a number of really good ideas here.

We will continue to work with the top teams to

refine and develop their ideas. It's gratifying to

see the entrepreneurial ability of our UT Dallas

students."

Dr. Joseph C. Picken,
IIE executive director

ReadyUp, an environment to host and regulate

online console-game competitions, took the

$6,500 top prize in the undergraduate

competition. The team included junior Nathan

Bachus and senior Jinson Jose from the School

of Management and sophomore Travis Dirr

from the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and

Computer Science. The team, which began beta

testing of the concept in March, said the system

would eliminate problems encountered by video

gamers and offer sponsorship opportunities for

businesses. "We will use the prize money to

upgrade and expand the current system,"

Bachus said.

The top place in each division also included a

$1,000 allowance to be used in connection with

travel to intercollegiate business plan competitions.

Past winners of the UT Dallas competition have

competed successfully in intercollegiate

competitions across the country. Several have

started businesses based on the ideas they

presented in the competition, said IIE Executive

Director Joseph C. Picken. "There are a number

of really good ideas here," he said. "We will

continue to work with the top teams to refine

and develop their ideas. It's gratifying to see

the entrepreneurial ability of our UT Dallas students."

"I've looked at investor pitches, and some

of them are not even close to this

level of quality. These are compelling ideas."

Jim Lafferty,
Genesis Biosystems Inc.


Returning judge Jim Lafferty of Genesis

Biosystems, Inc. said graduate-level teams

this year showed "a higher level of

sophistication, with higher quality and more

consistent presentations," which made judging

very challenging. "I've looked at investor pitches,

and some of them are not even close to this level

of quality," said Lafferty, an adviser to the institute.

"These are compelling ideas."

"There is an energy about the competition," said

another returning judge and institute adviser,

Scott Ticer of angel investor association Lone

Star Angels. "These are folks who are not just

talking about entrepreneurship, but they are actually

being entrepreneurs."

The contest was held during Global

Entrepreneurship Week (Nov. 16-22), a

worldwide observance designed to encourage

young people to bring creativity

and imagination to business endeavors.

 

 

IIE Business Competition winners, grad student division

From left:Joel Fontenot, IIE supporter and

managing partner of Trailblazer Capital; winning

graduate team members Swapnil Bora and Adam

Rivon; Joseph C. Picken, executive director of the

IIE; and Dan Bochsler, a School of Management

faculty member.

IIE Business Competition undergradsUndergrad winners
(from left)
Nathan Bachus,
Jinson Jose and
Travis Dirr
proposed ReadyUp,
a system for online
game competitions.

 

Other Winners

Other graduate division winners:

  • First runner-up:

     Honors and $4,000

     went to the Innovators team, made up of

     School of Management graduate students

     V. Giri Srinivasan and Vidhya Rohini

     Raman, and Harini Sridharan, a doctoral

     student in the School of Economic,

     Political and Policy Sciences. Their idea

     used the global positioning and voice

     -recognition applications available for

     smart phones to help visually impaired

     people successfully navigate city streets

     and use public transportation.

  • Second runner-up:

     $2,000 Went to team Charity

     League, made up of MBA student

     Travis Sanderfer and 2008 MBA

     graduate Sam Acosta, who crafted

     a way for fantasy sports league

     players to pursue that hobby

     while supporting their favorite

     charity with an ongoing revenue

     stream for the charity.

  • Third runner-up:

     ($1,000) Was team Solanics, made

     up of MBA students Melinda McCall

     and Miaoxin (Alfred) Zhou, who

     integrated consumer electronics with

     new organic semiconductor technology

     in a proximity sensor device to increase

     vehicle safety for drivers who have

     problems with depth perception.

Other Undergraduate division winners:

     Besides taking top undergraduate honors

     with ReadyUp, Nathan Bachus, Jinson Jose

     and Travis Dirr combined to earn first

     runner-up honors-and $4,000 in prize

     money-as the Play Anywhere team, which

     offered video-game players a way to use

     broadband connections to remotely access

     their own home game consoles and the

     consoles of other gamers.

  • The second runner-up:

     Title and $2,000 went to the Danon Group,

     a team comprised of School of Management

     juniors Daniel Kao and Heng Phou. Their

     idea was to establish a "rent-a-flower"

     agency to help customers trim event costs

     and waste by renting real flowers that have

     been preserved.

  • Third runner-up:

     Was team Bella, made up of Yingda Bi, a

     senior in the School of Economic, Political

     and Policy Sciences, and Mashrur Rahman,

     a senior in the School of Management.

     They earned $1,000 for Conversation

     Partners in English, an idea making use

     of online video and voice chat technology

     to connect students in China who are

     eager to learn to speak Englishwith paid

     conversation partners in the United States.

     The team also took best presentation

     ($500) honors.