Tag: Hatchery



According to statistics tracked by the Skandalaris Center, graduates of Olin’s Hatchery course have been very successful at launching startups, securing funding and creating jobs. From 2008 to the present, The Hatchery can boast:

170 total projects
77 launches
49 still operating – a 64% success rate
$33.8 Million raised
375 full-time positions created
15 provisional patents filed
51% of companies launched in St. Louis

Hundreds of students have taken Olin’s popular entrepreneurship course, The Hatchery, since it was started in 1996. In the beginning students worked for outside entrepreneurs, but since Cliff Holekamp took over the course in 2008, students come to the class with their own startup ideas and develop a business plan during the semester  – many with a goal to launch the business.

“I am delighted by the resourcefulness of our students,” said Clifford Holekamp, senior lecturer in entrepreneurship and director of the Entrepreneurship Platform at Olin. “More importantly, my objectives for the course are still academic. My goal is to teach our students the lessons that will help them be more successful in any of their future endeavors — whether it be a startup right out of school, or a business initiative years down the road.”

See more statistics on The Hatchery compiled by the Skandalaris Center, here.

To learn more about startup initiatives on the Washington University campus, visit Fuse​, the new website dedicated to entrepreneurship and innovation.

Erika Ebsworth-Goold contributed to this post.

https://infogr.am/hatchery_impact_2008_present




I moved from Tel Aviv to St. Louis to attend Olin’s MBA program. After my first semester, I was looking to buy a car that I could use for a road-trip to Key West. After meeting with a few too many sketchy people on Craigslist, I almost gave up. Then, I found out that WashU has several Facebook pages and google spreadsheets for buying and selling stuff.

Guest blogger: Shai Hatsor, MBA’16, co-founder of Quadzilla

I felt much more comfortable buying from another student, but using Facebook and Excel to buy something was not convenient at all. Moreover, there were too many small Facebook groups and, therefore, not much content on each. That’s when I got the idea of combining the functionality and convenience of public marketplaces such as Craigslist with the safety of closed communities such as Facebook groups which require users to verify their university email address. That’s the idea behind QUADZILLA – a new private marketplace for college students.

quadzilla logoI’m working on Quadzilla with my co-founder Eyal whose wife is a PhD student at WashU. They too are from Israel (small world). Our mission is to improve student life and help save students money. We believe that WashU students deserve a private “Craigslist” of their own that will be safer, more convenient, and tailored to their needs.

We launched our website (www.goquadzilla.com) last spring, and we already have more than 1,000 students using it. We also have a Facebook page (www.facebook.com/goquadzilla) that we use to connect with our users.

Click here to register.

Our supporters:

  • I’m now writing Quadzilla’s business plan with a team of students (Steve, Matt, and Daniel) as part of the Hatchery class taught by Professor Cliff Holekamp. Moreover, Professor Holekamp provided me with guidance throughout the past year. The entrepreneurship platform connects students to great resources and mentors to help with starting new businesses.
  • Snarf’s Sandwiches (an amazing local sandwich shop that operates 3 stores in St Louis) has really helped us so far because they too believe in our mission to create a safe student community. Snarf’s also supports the development of the entrepreneurship ecosystem in St Louis. We now raffle off one $20 Snarf’s gift card every week among our registered users to incentivize students to sign up.

In conclusion, we will do our best to make our vision a reality. If you would like to volunteer and help, please reach out to us on info@goquadzilla.com.




They’ve honed their business plans, practiced their elevator pitches, and this week students in The Hatchery entrepreneurship course make final presentations to investors to see who is ready to fly. Prof. Cliff Holekamp teaches The Hatchery course and provided a list of the companies pitching this week:

Westminster Press
Kogo
Cybrid Commerce
Cancer Glasses
IdealTap
Mercury Law
SIMP
Animal/Prison Rehab
Triumphant Life
BREAK
Hummingbird Tech
CarMD
TruTix

Westminster Press launched a Kickstarter campaign and is on track to meet its $10,000 goal. Watch their video and pledge!

Westminster Press

Nicholas Curry and Tucker Pierce are the creators of Westminster Press, and plan to launch an art gallery, retail consignment store, and printmaking studio dedicated to promoting work made by artists of marginalized identities.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Images: Chicks hatching, John Donges; Beakout, Brett Jordan, both from Flickr Creative Commons




Great news from the startup hatched in Olin’s Hatchery class that went on to win the Olin Cup, Arch Grants, and many other competitions. The medical device company, created by Andrew Brimer and Abigail Cohen when they were WUSTL undergrads, has raised $1.25 million from a group of angel investors.

When they won the Olin Cup in 2013, the Sparo Labs team was made up of four WUSTL undergraduate students. Sparo Labs has developed a new spirometer to monitor lung function.

See the whole story in the St. Louis Business Journal.

Congrats Abby and Andrew!!

 

 




For most rising college seniors, the last weeks of junior year are spent worrying about summer internships and facing the reality of post-college plans.

For Jolijt Tamanaha, her last weeks of junior year at Washington University in St. Louis were spent making a deal to sell a startup she co-founded called Farmplicity — an online marketplace that matches restaurants with local farmers — founded in a course through Olin Business School called The Hatchery.

And it’s that course — and the mentoring received at the university — that Tamanaha, a political science major in Arts & Sciences, credits for allowing her to grow and sell a successful startup while still in school.

“The Hatchery is great because it is structured in a way that provides you with enough guidance that you don’t feel like you’re completely on your own,” Tamanaha said, “but enough freedom that you truly learn through experience.

“The course taught us how to organize our thoughts and how to pitch the business,” she said. “The multiple presentations that we made about Farmplicity were excellent practice for the many times we pitched Farmplicity to judges, potential investors and customers.”

Farmlicipty co-founders Joljit Tamanaha and Drew Koch

Farmlicipty co-founders Joljit Tamanaha and Drew Koch

Farmplicity, started in 2013 by Tamanaha with Drew Koch and Andrew Lin, both recent alumni of Olin, currently matches 130 local farmers to more than 100 restaurants. The venture helps smooth the process of ordering locally-grown produce, fruits, meats and other food products.

Sunfarm Food Service, a leader in providing fine produce and dairy products to top restaurants, caterers, hotels and other food services, acquired the startup in early May.

“Our students at Washington University never cease to amaze me,” said Clifford Holekamp, senior lecturer in entrepreneurship, director of Olin’s entrepreneurship platform and a Hatchery professor. “Farmplicity went from Hatchery class, to founding, to growth, to exit — all before the co-founder’s senior year. It’s a very impressive accomplishment.

“I am pleased to see our students make a lasting contribution to the farm-to-table supply chain in St. Louis,” Holekamp said. “With the acquisition by Sunfarm, Farmplicity will have the infrastructure and sustainability to impact the community for years to come.”

The Hatchery, open to both WUSTL undergraduates and graduate students, is one of the university’s capstone entrepreneurship courses. It was one of the first business courses in the country to use multidisciplinary team collaboration, mentoring and coaching to support students as they launch enterprises while in college.

Enrolled students can work on their own social or commercial venture ideas or partner with community entrepreneurs already in development.

Starting Farmplicity “has been an amazing journey that shaped my whole experience at the university,” Tamanaha said. “Without Farmplicity, I wouldn’t have registered for many of the classes I’ve taken or met most of the professors who have helped me.

“School work is a very different experience when you can sit in class and think ‘How would I apply this to my business?’ Through Farmplicity, I interacted with so many local professionals, which taught me to love St. Louis and all of the opportunities in this city.

“Farmplicity has the potential to modernize local food distribution so that small farmers can successfully compete with larger growers, and Sunfarm is the perfect company to turn that potential into results,” Tamanaha said.

“Sunfarm’s proven expertise in delivering food also will create a more efficient and more synchronized Farmplicity for both farmers and chefs,” she said. “And most importantly, Sunfarm shares our values and belief in the importance of building a strong local food movement.”

Now that the acquisition is over, Tamanaha will focus on enjoying her senior year. But the entrepreneurship bug hasn’t left her just yet.

“I have an idea for a new marketing startup that I’m going to work on,” she said.

Article by Neil Schoenherr, WUSTL News

 




Students presented their “competition pitches” to a panel of 20 entrepreneurs and investors from the St. Louis startup community during the last week of classes in December. There were 60 students participating on 16 teams in two flights.

The feedback from the judges was that this was the highest quality of pitches that they have ever seen in The Hatchery.  The students transformed their raw ideas to invest-able plans in one semester.  I am very proud of what they accomplished.

The judges’ results:

Thursday Flight:
#1. TeleREDI (telemedicine platform) led by EMBA student Javier Esteban
Varela, MD

#2. Zymplr (new football helmet technology) led by BSBA student Chisolm
Uche. Read more about this company in Olin Business Magazine.

#3. AirHop (private aviation concept) led by MBA Ryan Maher

Friday Flight:
#1. River City Distillery (craft whiskey distillery) led by BSBA
student Dara Baker

#2. The Reserve (online fashion marketplace) led by MBAs Leigh Farah
and Ashley Ross. Leigh was a guest on the Techli Domain Report with Prof. Holekamp and Andrews Brimmer’13 talking about The Hatchery course.

#3. Data TurnAround (data services) led by MBA Kris Klinkerman