|
Follow Us:
Home
Features
Feature Stories
Videos
Blogs
News
Development News
Innovation News
In The News
Focus
Alternative Energy
Entrepreneurship
Film And Video
Green Building
Higher Education
Internet
Life Sciences
Software Design
Venture Capital
Video Game Design
Web 2.0
Growing Companies
Jobs
Jobs Landed
Jobs Available
Internships Available
Places
Ann Arbor
Chelsea
Dexter
Saline
Ypsilanti
FilterD
Fly fishing at the Argo Cascades - Ann Arbor - Doug Coombe
|
Show Photo
Innovation & Job News
U-M student start-ups take 98K from Mich Biz Competition
Wednesday, March 03, 2010
Related Tags
Entrepreneurship
,
Higher Education
,
University Of Michigan
,
Venture Capital
Ann Arbor
More seed capital is creeping into the coffers of local start-ups now that the Michigan Business Challenge has awarded nearly $100,000 to student-led start-ups from the University of Michigan.
The
Zell Lurie Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies
at the U-M Ross School of Business awarded the grants to these new economy-based start-ups for excellence in new business plans and concepts. Eighty-five teams competed for the grants with a couple dozen walking away with money. That's a new record for the competition that is now in its fourth year.
Two of the start-ups that landed four figures in seed money include $2,000 to North Coast Fisheries (an organic fish farm firm) for "Best Written Business Plan" and $1,000 to Miilo (an e-commerce site for cosmetics for women of color) for advancing to the final round. Each found immediate uses for their winnings.
"These funds are a great first step as far as exploring all of the legal issues to create a legal entity," says Aaron Skrocki, a MBA student at U-M and CEO of North Coast Fisheries.
"The $1,000 went straight to the web designer," says Kimberly Dillon, a U-M MBA student and founder of Miilo.
The
Michigan Business Challenge
lets the student entrepreneurs receive support, training and feedback from judges at each phase of the competition. The students are exposed to a rigorous business development boot camp that reinforces the notion that a solid business foundation is necessary to commercialize a great idea.
A list of this year's major winners of the competition can be found
here
.
Source: University of Michigan, Kimberly Dillon, founder of Miilo and Aaron Skrocki, CEO of North Coast Fisheries
Writer: Jon Zemke
Give us your email and we will give you our weekly online magazine. Fair?
Share this page
Share
Tweet
0
Email
0
Print
Give us your email and we will give you our weekly online magazine. Fair?