- University News Archive - 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock /news-archive/tag/governors-cup/ 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Thu, 02 Aug 2018 14:44:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 After winning Governor’s Cup, 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock student startup has eyes on bigger prize /news-archive/2018/08/02/spiritum-solutions-asbtdc/ Thu, 02 Aug 2018 14:44:11 +0000 /news/?p=71256 ... After winning Governor’s Cup, 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock student startup has eyes on bigger prize]]> Their company,听Spiritum Solutions, along with team members Kiauna Rome and听Ingrid Helgestad, won the undergraduate division of听the听2018 Arkansas Governor鈥檚 Cup. Now they want to bring their innovative medical device 鈥 a mouth guard to keep patients undergoing surgery or other procedures from injuring themselves 鈥 to market.

The young entrepreneurs are getting help with their startup from the Arkansas Small Business and Technology Development Center.

On-campus assistance

The center鈥檚听听met Lester in 2016 when Trigeaud was a 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock graduate student. They competed in the Governor鈥檚 Cup together. Lester reached out to his former teammate, now an ASBTDC business consultant, to help the Spiritum Solutions team prepare for this year鈥檚 competition. 鈥淚 helped them prioritize all their great ideas into something they can manage and deliver,鈥 said Trigeaud. Spiritum has also benefited from the center鈥檚听in-depth customer and competitor research. 鈥淢artial has worked with us since we just were an idea, to help us secure funding, and now looking into SBIR grants. He continues to check up on our progress to help address our ever-changing needs,鈥 said Lester.

The market research is extensive and allows us to look into areas that we might not have considered before,鈥 Lester said. 鈥淲e use these reports as a guide for who we might need to make customer discovery with next.鈥

Entrepreneur mindset

While the Governor鈥檚 Cup prize was $25,000, commercializing a medical device will require a much larger sum of money and听moving from a student mindset to an entrepreneur mindset,鈥听said Trigeaud. 鈥淵ou raise a little through competitions, but you need millions to launch.” Lester and Asher understand the challenge before them and appreciate having Trigeaud and the center in their corner. 鈥淎s our company grows, our听needs change听with the growth,鈥 said Lester. 鈥淲e will consult with experts at the ASBTDC in helping us address our ever-changing听needs.鈥 This article was written by Gwen Green, communications coordinator at the Arkansas Small Business and Technology Development Center.听]]>
糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock students win big in 2018 Arkansas Governor鈥檚 Cup /news-archive/2018/04/19/ua-little-rock-students-win-big-2018-arkansas-governors-cup/ Thu, 19 Apr 2018 15:20:39 +0000 /news/?p=70236 ... 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock students win big in 2018 Arkansas Governor鈥檚 Cup]]> Last year, a group of students from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock merged their talents and developed a business venture that has now received a substantial amount of recognition both in and outside of Arkansas. On Wednesday, April 18, the students were awarded top honors – and $25,000 – in the undergraduate division of the Arkansas Governor鈥檚 Cup, a statewide business plan competition for college and graduate students sponsored by Arkansas Capital Corporation. 听 Team members include Nick Lester, Noah Asher, Kiauna Rome, and Ingrid Helgestad. Their device, Spiritum Solutions, is a mouth guard designed so that patients undergoing surgery or bronchoscope procedures do not damage their mouths by biting down on the tubes. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 just an undergraduate exercise for them. They are going to move forward with the business,鈥 said Stuart McLendon, an adjunct professor and team sponsor for the College of Business team. 鈥淎s a 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock alumnus, former judge for the competition, and now team sponsor, I can say that this is by far the best and most useful experience that any college student can obtain during the course of their education. It provides extremely valuable real-world expertise building a team, building a product, selling yourself and your ideas, and doing it in a collaborative way.鈥 In addition to the team鈥檚 win, McLendon received $2,000 as team sponsor, and Noah Asher received a $2,000 cash prize for winning the undergraduate elevator pitch competition. The elevator pitch is a highlight activity of the awards luncheon during which one representative from each of the finalist teams has 90 seconds to pitch his or her team鈥檚 business plan to the audience members, who vote via text to determine the winner. 鈥淗e knocked it out of the park,鈥 McLendon said of Asher鈥檚 pitch. Recently, this group of students have been no strangers to winning. After pitching Spiritum Solutions during Texas Christian University鈥檚 Values and Ventures competition, the students received honorable mention and were awarded $2,500. They were selected as one of six finalists among 55 competing teams. 鈥淭his team was truly stellar,鈥 said Elaine Cole, public relations manager at Texas Christian University. 鈥淚 enjoyed meeting them and watching their presentation.鈥 Last fall, the students also participated in the Arkansas Regional Innovation Hub鈥檚 Delta I-Fund program, an early stage proof-of-concept fund created to capitalize and train up-and-coming entrepreneurs. The 12-week program provided mentorship to the young business minds and helped them to develop and validate their ideas. After going through three stages of pitching for investment funding, the students raised $50,000 from the I-Fund program. They also received a $25,000 Small Business Innovation Research grant from the National Science Foundation. Thanks to the numerous financial awards, the students can now move forward with prototype and design iterations, FDA consulting, paying legal and patenting fees, and continuing research. The team will continue this momentum, competing May 7 in Memphis in an accelerator competition focused on healthcare technology. For more information, contact McLendon at SMcLendon@cfonet.biz.  ]]>