Summer can be a time for rest and relaxation 鈥 or to get something started.
This summer, , which is 鈥減owered by鈥 the Faculty of Management鈥檚 , launched a new program called 鈥淪umm鈥檈r UP!鈥 The program takes young start-up companies that show exceptional entrepreneurial promise and helps to fund them while providing them an intensive eight weeks of mentorship, classes, and support.
Amongst the teams who completed the program this year were Bootstrap Magazine, Salubian Health, Vantij and Peanut. Their members included students and graduates from fields as diverse as journalism, computer science, health care and business.
Thomas Battle, project manager with Starting Lean, says the focus was on innovation, 鈥渟tudents that would go out and do something with their work.鈥 Battle adds that 麻豆传媒 really benefits from running hands-on programs like this, providing young people with the skills and experiences to identify key needs and build companies and organizations to meet them.
Bootstrap Magazine, for example, seeks to highlight local Nova Scotia businesses, acknowledging that while the province is full of amazing hidden gems, it鈥檚 hard to find them 鈥 particularly in the more rural communities. The magazine operates on a community supported publication model in which businesses become members which allows them to distribute copies, take out ads at a discounted price and affords them the opportunity to be featured in the magazine.
Projects getting off the ground
Two of the projects that took part in Summ鈥檈r Up are health related, seeking to improve the efficiency of health care through technology. Salubian Health provides a solution to wait times at doctors鈥 offices. For a small fee, individuals get airport-esque updates on appointment delays, allowing them to go do groceries or grab a coffee before their appointment. One clinic in town is already beta testing the program. Vantij is a harmonized health-care solution for emergency room efficiency. It simplifies communication between emergency room staff, and the QEII is already backing the project and assisting with funding and testing.
In the true spirit of diversity, the final project in this year鈥檚 contingent was a 鈥渟ocial gaming sports app.鈥 Peanut allows customers at sports bars to challenge one another over both a sport鈥檚 major events and small happenings 鈥 like, for example, whether a baseball player might hit for the cycle. The catch? Participants are not betting money, but instead competing over the game鈥檚 digital 鈥減eanuts.鈥
Battle says the program had a successful year but, in true entrepreneurial style, he鈥檚 always looking for ways to make improvements. Next year, thanks to a grant from the Dobson Foundation, teams will compete for one of 10 spots in the accelerator program, with each of the successful teams receiving $10,000 in funding. The hope is that they鈥檒l be able to attract more participants from outside the university, increasing the program鈥檚 reach and impact.
Learn more about Starting Lean .