These college entrepreneurs will now be paired with mentors and have seven weeks to build a business plan before presenting it before a panel of judges on Sat., April 29, in Orono. Up for grabs is $20,000 in cash and in-kind support. The startup ideas range from a video game company to one that would offer an innovative home-heating appliance. Students who applied could be at any early stage of their business, from the idea phase to post-revenue. The only requirements are that the business be headquartered—or plan to be headquartered—in Maine, and that prior funding is not in excess of $50,000. Despite its name, the business plan competition is open to students enrolled in any Maine college or university. Three of the five finalists are enrolled at the University of Maine, while the two others are enrolled at the College of the Atlantic and Southern Maine Community College. Last year, two Colby College students won the competition with their idea for a food-ordering mobile app.
2017 Saw a Record Number of Applicants
Forty-five teams of college entrepreneurs entered the UMaine Business Challenge, which student organizers said set a record for the number of applicants. “There were more applicants this year than any other year” says Nicholas LaJoie, chair of this year’s UBC Planning Committee. “Some well thought-out business plans couldn’t be moved forward, and that’s a testament to the five teams selected.” The 2017 finalists are:
Bradley Shepherd, a second-year UMaine graduate student, is founder of a videogame company called Boreal Games and is in the process of developing a multiplayer, online collectible card game.
Anita van Dam, a sophomore at the College of the Atlantic, is co-founder of [Re]produce, which is a low-profit limited liability company (L3C) founded by COA students that aims to reduce food waste and increase a farmer’s income by purchasing and processing surplus and imperfect fruits and vegetables from local farmers in Maine and selling them as frozen pre-cut vegetables to local supermarkets and health food stores within Portland and other Maine cities.
Benjamin Koehler, a senior at UMaine studying mechanical engineering, has developed a product called the Comfort Appliance, which is able to draw heat off of a wood stove, and store it in a portable, insulated box that can then be carried to another room to provide warmth to an otherwise unheated space.
Michael D. Parks, a student at Southern Maine Community College, is founder of Dionysus Management LLC, which plans to launch and operate the Maine Beer Festival and the Maine Wine Festival.
Ian Shea, a UMaine senior, and his co-founder Paul Kurnick, a junior, have developed a product they call the Litbalm, which is essentially a pocket-sized contraption that enables a Bic lighter and a standard lip balm to be combined into a single tool.
The finalists will be competing for a first-place cash prize of $5,000 provided by the competition’s sponsor, Business Lending Solutions, which will also provide $5,000 of in-kind services. The Maine Business School will provide a second-place prize of $1,000. In addition, the Bruce Fournier Foundation will award a $5,000 Tech Prize (with another $5,000 available if the winner hits certain milestones) to the college entrepreneur with the best $10,000 Innovation Prize on the line as well, bringing the total prize money in excess of $20,000. The post UMaine Business Challenge names 2017 finalists appeared first on Maine Startups Insider.