University of Michigan's Zell Lurie Institute Awards Student Entrepreneurs More than $50,000 in Grants
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University of Michigan's Zell Lurie Institute Awards Student Entrepreneurs
More than $50,000 in Grants
2009 Dare to Dream Recipients Include Business Concepts in Aviation, Clean
Technology, Life Sciences and Consumer Services Industries
ANN ARBOR, Mich., Oct. 19 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Samuel Zell & Robert
H. Lurie Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies at the University of Michigan
Ross School of Business today announced the recipients of the Fall 2009 Eugene
Applebaum Dare to Dream Grant Program, where students apply for funding to
advance their innovative, high-potential business concepts toward launch.
Grant recipients were awarded funding and resources totaling $50,000 based on
business concepts and plans submitted to panels of judges made up of faculty
and members of the entrepreneurial and venture capital communities. In
addition to the financial awards, grant recipients will receive counsel from
leading business experts on business plan development and funding strategies.
"The innovation and industries represented by this year's Dare to Dream
student teams reflect the unique, research-rich environment the University
offers to aspiring entrepreneurs," stated Tom Kinnear, executive director of
the Samuel Zell & Robert H. Lurie Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies.
"Participating in the competition is a fantastic learning experience for our
students. They are forced to evaluate market potential for their ideas,
develop a business case and conduct due diligence. Selected teams benefit not
only from the financing but they also gain access to business experts and
venture capital leaders to determine next steps in the development of their
business concepts."
Celebrating its 10th Anniversary this year, the Zell Lurie Institute has
awarded more than $692,000 to 993 students in Dare to Dream grants for student
start-ups since the program's inception. Grants are administered at three
funding levels: business design grants at $500, assessment grants at $1,500,
and up to $10,000 for integration grants. The following student teams
received grants in October 2009:
Integration Grants (up to $10,000 for each team)
-- Hyperion ($5,000) - designer and manufacturer of light sport aircrafts
-- MyBandStock ($5,000) - online fundraising platform for performing
artists
-- Natural Aquaculture ($5,000) - antibiotic-free, hormone-free native
fishery
-- Structured Microsystems ($10,000) - offers three dimensionally stacked
integrated circuits in a single package
Assessment Grants ($1,500 each)
-- Ayah - alternative method to test the "human-ness" of web site
visitors
-- Backyard Brains - designs and markets affordable neuroscience kits for
educational purposes
-- Charter Jet Connect - online marketplace for booking charter aircraft
-- City Connect - process solution for location-based government services
-- Digital Receipts - digital capture and storage technology for
receipts
-- Innovascular - device to localize and control severe bleeding
-- IRIZ Technologies - specialized service to screen the effect of
compounds on the motility of target cancer cell lines
-- Joe - point of sale system for coffee shops
-- Lodestone Capital - bridges the divide between energy services
companies
and property owners reluctant to invest in energy efficient projects
-- Nalu Solar Tools - web-based software that offers operational support
for solar PV contractors
-- Securilink - personal safety device that utilizes cell phone
technology
-- Urban Food Gardener - online information and products for urban
gardening
Business Design Grants ($500 each)
-- A2D Technologies - analog to digital converter circuit design
-- Capture Fitness - eco-gym that generates electricity and transfers it
directly back into the electrical grid
-- Carbon Growth - system that uses carbon dioxide to promote crop growth
-- DesignFloor - Product Lifecycle Management software system for small
and
medium sized manufacturing companies
-- Exercise Eco Energy - stationary bicycle that is an electrical
generator
-- Grub Grabber - Web application that alerts patrons to daily specials
from local restaurants
-- Heart Graffiti - silver commemorative jewelry for female college
students
-- LEAD Insurance Agency - insurance for sustainable commercial buildings
-- Navitus Global - designing a low-cost, energy efficient refrigerator
for
low-income and temporary emergency housing
-- "No-Worries" Debit Card - debit card for international travelers
-- The Pool - speed dating through interactive gaming
-- RIPE Group - Biomimicry-based non-slip application for various
applications
-- Samaj - Indian senior-living facility in United States
-- Unnamed product - hand-held device that combines technologies targeted
at youth in China
The Dare to Dream program, a hallmark of the Zell Lurie Institute, has been
aiding student-run high growth business concepts since 2002. The program
distributes up to $100,000 per academic year to Ross School of Business
students. The program benefits students, as well as the local and university
community, by stimulating entrepreneurial efforts and starting new businesses.
About the Samuel Zell & Robert H. Lurie Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies
/ Center for Venture Capital & Private Equity Finance at the Ross School of
Business at the University of Michigan
The Institute and its Center for Venture Capital and Private Equity Finance
bring together a potent mix of knowledge, experience and opportunities from
the front lines of entrepreneurship and alternative investments. The student
learning experience is further enhanced through internships, entrepreneurial
clubs and organization and events that serve to provide viable networks and
engage the business community. The School's two student-led investment funds,
with over $3M in management, immerse students in the business assessment and
investment process. Members of the Advisory Board include Samuel Zell,
Chairman of Equity Group Investments; Michael Hallman, former COO of Microsoft
Corporation; and Eugene Applebaum, Founder of Arbor Drugs, Inc. For more
information, visit the Institute at www.zli.bus.umich.edu.
SOURCE The Zell Lurie Institute
Mary Nickson of Zell Lurie Institute, +1-734-615-4424, mnickson@umich.edu; or
Jean Serra, +1-617-426-2222, jserra@v2comms.com, for The Zell Lurie Institute
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