The
young and the restless For these youthful alumni, the startups can’t wait
By Brett Tomlinson
The face
value on tickets for Super Bowl XLII in February ranged from $700 to $900,
and in resale markets, the average cost jumped to about five times the
initial price tag. But what were the tickets really worth? Is there any
way to know?
Gerry Wilson ’00 and Hagos Mehreteab ’99 have a way to find
out. In 2004, the former high school classmates from Piscataway, N.J.,
sketched out a plan to sell futures contracts for tickets to major sporting
events, creating a company called Yoonew (as in, “You knew the Giants
were going to the Super Bowl”). Last year, they launched the first
market for ticket futures, to allow fans, traders, and ticket brokers
to buy and sell contracts throughout the season.
In their system, each contract is worth one championship ticket, provided
the designated team reaches the big game, and the contract price rises
and falls as traders evaluate the team’s prospects. For example,
New York Giants futures bottomed out in mid-December, when a loss to Washington
threatened to keep the team out of the playoffs, but the price soared
in January as New York won three straight postseason games. With users
buying and selling in real time, the final prices of contracts for Super
Bowl-bound teams should provide an estimate of what fans think the tickets
are worth. This year, the value was between $2,500 and $4,900, depending
on the seat location.
“We want people to trade tickets and ticket futures like they
trade bonds and stocks,” Mehreteab says. “We use technology
to give true price discovery in an industry where price discovery is the
whole point of the game.”
Yoonew’s office in midtown Manhattan seems an unlikely hub for
a new stock exchange. About a dozen 20-somethings, dressed in jeans and
sweatshirts, tap and click away at computers in two connected bullpens.
A leather couch sits against one wall, facing a pair of flat-screen TVs,
and in the corner, a dorm-room refrigerator stocks the necessities —
cans of Red Bull, regular and diet. But on the Web, in the space that
matters, Yoonew.com looks as professional as any online brokerage, with
price graphs, stadium seating maps, and a scrolling ticker that shows
the up-to-date prices of futures contracts for teams vying to play in
the NCAA Final Four.
Ticket futures are catching on, according to Wilson, and investors have
given Yoonew a solid foundation. As in any startup, there are risks, from
technical glitches and market fluctuations to the entry of new competitors,
but the founders are unfazed. “Do I feel like I’m being risky?”
Mehreteab says. “Not really, in the traditional sense. As an entrepreneur,
I feel like I’m the master of my destiny. And I don’t think
you could say that about any other type of business.”
Self-reliance is just one of the factors that drive Princeton alumni
like Mehreteab and Wilson to strike out on their own and try to turn innovative
ideas into profitable companies. Daily challenges, a steep learning curve,
and a chance to make a difference in the world contribute as well, according
to a handful of Princeton’s young entrepreneurs — mostly engineers
— who spoke with PAW.
In
the high-tech world of medical devices, Chris Loose ’02 has found
a job that he says “could never get boring.” Loose developed
a method of making new antibiotics while pursuing his Ph.D. in chemical
engineering at MIT, working with a small team that initially included
colleague Joel Moxley ’02. Backed by a successful run in business-plan
competitions and support from venture capitalists, Loose’s company,
SteriCoat, is applying the technology to ward off bacterial infections
on medical devices like catheters.
Robert Moore ’06, a self-described “serial entrepreneur,”
relishes any opportunity to combine his creativity and his technological
skills. As an undergraduate, he created a hand-held Texas Hold ’Em
odds calculator at the height of the online poker craze. His latest venture
is a loyalty program that enables online shoppers to help their favorite
nonprofits raise money by ordering from participating retailers.
Darren Hammell ’01 says that running a startup, or even just working
for one, is filled with “intangible benefits” like understanding
exactly how you’ve contributed to the final product. Hammell and
co-founders Mark Holveck ’01, Erik Limpaecher ’01, and John
Lerch ’01 launched Princeton Power Systems more than six years ago,
aiming to develop a low-cost way of making “clean” power,
with minimal fluctuations in current. Today, the company’s power
converters produce energy that is both clean and green, operating in wind
turbines and solar arrays.
While most of these alumni entrepreneurs developed their ideas outside
campus labs, their experiences at Princeton helped to shape their interests.
Loose, for example, worked on peptide design with chemical engineering
professor Chris Floudas, building a strong scientific foundation as he
learned about finance and markets by pursuing a certificate in operations
research and financial engineering. But his entrepreneurial drive surfaced
after college, when he was working as a researcher at Merck. The environment,
he says, was not dynamic enough for his taste, so he enrolled in graduate
school at MIT, joining a lab known for developing innovative technologies.
After spending four years working with antibiotics and publishing a
paper in Nature, Loose began devoting more attention to applications,
and he realized that he could improve on the antibiotics currently used
to coat medical devices. Loose has developed a long-
lasting, nonleaching antimicrobial coating that, in theory, could be
used on everything from needles to artificial joints. “If you want
to think of an analogy, it’s like we’ve created a bed of nails
on the surface [of a medical device],” he says. “Bacteria
run into it, they explode. Human cells run into it and they’re unharmed.”
With a small team of collaborators, Loose first pitched the idea at
a business-plan contest, a sort of warm-up for startups. Win or lose,
he figured it would be helpful to interact with venture capitalists and
experts in science and medicine. At MIT, known as a hotbed for new technologies,
the annual 100K Entrepreneurship Competition starts with more than 100
teams and whittles down to a handful of finalists. The rule of thumb is
that you want to come in second or third place, Loose jokes, since runner-up
teams traditionally have fared well in the real world. SteriCoat exceeded
his expectations, capturing the $30,000 top prize in the venture category.
The group went on to collect more prize money in contests at Harvard,
Columbia, Oxford, and Cambridge.
SteriCoat’s well-practiced pitch soon drew attention from venture
capitalists, including two Princeton alumni at 5AM Ventures, a firm that
supports early-stage life-science companies. Kevin Forrest *05, a molecular
biology Ph.D. who works in the firm’s Boston office, says that SteriCoat
met all the requirements of a promising startup: strong intellectual property,
based on rigorous science; an application that could fill an unmet need;
and a solid, forward-thinking management team. In August 2007, 5AM Ventures
agreed to back SteriCoat. Since then, Loose, who completed his Ph.D. last
year, has been the company’s chief technology officer, working to
develop its first real-world application: an antibiotic catheter that
he hopes will reach hospitals by 2011.
John Diekman ’65, a managing partner at 5AM Ventures, says that
Loose’s refreshing mix of intelligence, confidence, and a willingness
to listen to advice helped seal the deal. “He has the brains and
the creativity to be an extraordinary academic if he wanted to,”
Diekman says, “but he also realizes that he has an entrepreneurial
instinct.”
The
same entrepreneurial instinct was part of Robert Moore’s makeup
even before he came to college. He had started a Web design company in
high school, building sites for the businesses that his friends’
parents owned. But his first big success as an entrepreneur was born in
the summer after his sophomore year at Princeton.
Like many other college students, Moore got caught up in the online
poker craze, playing in Texas Hold ’Em tournaments in his free time.
But he wasn’t content just to play the cards he was dealt and hope
for the best. Moore wanted an edge, so he created a software application
to calculate his odds of winning each hand, based on the cards he had
and the community cards at the center of the table. He eventually started
selling the software online, and it caught the eye of a developer from
The Sharper Image, who asked Moore to help him create a hand-held version.
Translating his program proved challenging, given the limited computing
power available in an inexpensive hand-held gadget. But Moore and his
new collaborators got the device on Sharper Image shelves in time for
the holiday season, providing what he calls “a nice income boost,
for a college student.”
Moore’s knack for gadgets also helped in the classroom at Princeton
when he took an entrepreneurial engineering course co-taught by A.J. Khubani,
founder of TeleBrands (and “king of the infomercial,” according
to ABC’s Nightline). The class project was to engineer
a product within a challenging set of parameters: It had to be light,
compact, and inexpensive, with a minimum of moving parts. Moore’s
team developed a wet-vacuum attachment that earned a marketing deal with
TeleBrands, which sells portable staircases for puppies and collapsible,
pocket-sized fishing rods, among other things. But as-seen-on-TV success
proved elusive: An infomercial for the “Wetter-Vac” never
aired, after flopping in the testing phase.
After Moore’s experience with TeleBrands, which included a trip
to China for an inside look at the development process, he became interested
in the venture-capital side of entrepreneurship, which is now his day
job. But he has continued to develop ideas of his own. Spurred by one
of his former high school teachers, Moore created SmartRaise, an online
fundraising tool that he says is “basically a giant loyalty program.”
A nonprofit, like the local PTA, can ask its members to enroll for free,
and each time they shop online at a participating retailer, the retailer
donates a small portion to the nonprofit. Retailers draw more customers,
nonprofits raise money without much effort, and SmartRaise gets a tiny
transaction fee. SmartRaise is a volume business, Moore says, and there
are no guarantees that the concept will catch on. But regardless, he is
confident that this is not his last startup. “I have no doubt in
my mind that there will be a next thing,” he says.
Like
Moore, Hammell and his co-founders at Princeton Power Systems got a boost
in their work from a course at Princeton. In their case, it was “High-Tech
Entrepreneurship,” a perennially popular offering in electrical
engineering taught by Ed Zschau ’61, a technology pioneer, former
IBM executive, and onetime congressman. Hammell’s friends, Limpaecher
and Lerch, built a business plan around a patented technology for power
conversion created by Limpaecher’s father. The basic idea was to
provide a more efficient way to produce “cleaner” power, evening
out fluctuating current with novel circuit designs.
Limpaecher, who now serves as Princeton Power’s lead controls
engineer, recruited Hammell and Holveck to expand the idea for Princeton’s
student business-plan competition. When their plan won the top prize in
2001, the four classmates decided to stay on campus for the summer after
graduation and see if they could turn it into a real company.
That was where Hammell expected it to end. He had a job lined up at
Microsoft — his dream job, he thought at the time — and starting
a com-pany with three other 22-year-olds seemed like an uncertain career
path, at best. But Hammell’s plan changed shortly after graduation
when Greg Olsen, a local technology entrepreneur, agreed to pour more
than a half-million dollars into their startup.
In the months that followed, the original business plan changed significantly.
Instead of serving utility companies, Princeton Power turned its primary
focus toward alternative energy. To export wind and solar power to a public
utility grid, alternative-energy producers have to meet strict standards
for clean power. Princeton Power provides the technology to make that
possible, and the market for its products is growing.
Princeton Power’s devices don’t look all that impressive
— most consist of a large metal casing, a little smaller than a
refrigerator, with an intricate collection of circuits and connected wires
at the center — and the company’s quarters at Princeton’s
Forrestal Center are spacious but frugally decorated (“no Persian
rugs,” Hammell says with a smile). But in two key measures, Princeton
Power is a success: The company has grown steadily, thanks in large part
to grants from the Department of Energy and contracts with the U.S. Navy
and NASA; and in each year since 2005, it has turned a profit.
The path to profitability had its rough spots, Hammell admits, including
two months in which the company could not cover its payroll, but the last
three years have provided a sense of stability. Princeton Power now employs
17 people — 12 full-time and five part-time — including three
of the founders (Lerch left a year after graduation), and the long, draining
hours of the group’s first summer — building a technology
startup from a dorm room without air-conditioning — seem like a
distant memory. “We work a lot less but accomplish more,”
Hammell says.
Long hours are still part of the job for Wilson, the CEO of Yoonew,
partly because the company’s online market for ticket futures is
open 22 hours a day (it used to be 20, but West Coast traders complained
that they needed more time). Wilson may sleep a little later than most
of his friends, arriving at the office around 10 a.m., but he makes up
for it by staying until midnight a few days each week and working weekends.
Even when he’s not at work, Yoonew is on his mind. “As much
as I try to focus on other stuff, I can’t,” he says.
Wilson’s story since college has been one of lemons-to-lemonade.
His first job, with the business-software com-pany MicroStrategy, consisted
of two months of training, one day in the main office, and a severance
package — the dot-com bubble had burst and there was no room for
the new trainees. So Wilson took what he had learned in those two months
and became a consultant for companies that used MicroStrategy software.
A few years later, while attending business school at MIT, Wilson tried
but failed to get tickets to see a Boston Red Sox playoff game. His disappointment
became part of his motivation to start Yoonew. And a couple of years after
that, when hyper-inflated ticket prices at the 2005 NCAA Final Four threatened
to sink Yoonew, Wilson dipped into his retirement savings, fulfilled every
ticket contract the company had, and used the experience to revamp his
approach to risk management. Yoonew now makes deals with ticket brokers
to buy tickets well in advance of big events, avoiding some of the pregame
inflation.
Mehreteab, like Wilson, attended business school at MIT after running
his own company, a marketing and promotions group. He thought he was ready
to join the corporate world, in either investment banking or consulting,
but when he heard Wilson’s ideas for Yoonew, he signed on without
hesitation. “I had the bug — the startup bug, the entrepreneurial
bug — and I couldn’t shake it,” he says.
Courses at Princeton, Wilson and Mehreteab say, taught them practical
things that helped them launch Yoonew, from technical knowledge in computer
programming to an understanding of markets. Wilson also credits the University
for teaching him to think big — a necessity for a successful entrepreneur.
“[Princeton] opened up my eyes,” he says. “There’s
so much more that you can do, so many new ideas. ... We’re only
really limited by our own imagination.”
The next generation of Princeton entrepreneurs is getting a head start
on campus, developing their ideas through student-run initiatives like
the Princeton Entrepreneurship Club and its TigerLaunch business plan
competition (see sidebar). The Center for Innovation in Engineering Education
(CIEE) also provides opportunities for students to explore entrepreneurial
paths through internships and courses. Engineering Dean H. Vincent Poor
*77 established a visiting professorship in entrepreneurship, currently
held by Julian Lange ’65, a professor of entrepreneurship and public
policy at Babson College; and Olsen, Princeton Power’s initial financier,
was named the University’s first entrepreneur-in-residence last
year. He meets with students during monthly office hours.
CIEE hosts occasional entrepreneurial-themed lectures, panel discussions,
and networking events for students, faculty, and alumni, designed to increase
opportunities for “creative collisions,” according to Bob
Monsour, CIEE’s associate director for external affairs. But one
of the best resources, Monsour says, is simply the chance to see what’s
possible, by meeting entrepreneurs like Loose and Hammell, both of whom
spoke to students at CIEE events last semester.
Princeton students, Loose says, have a chance to succeed as entrepreneurs
because they tend to be well-rounded, well-spoken, and ambitious. Hammell
agrees, but he adds that it can be difficult to convince students that
the startup route is as rewarding as some of the other career paths open
to Princeton graduates.
“When you’re sitting in those chairs in the classrooms,
it’s hard to imagine how much fun it actually is when you get to
this stage,” Hammell says. “The most important part is to
just try. Once you’ve stepped off that cliff, [you’re forced
to] learn so quickly that your chances of success go up and up. That’s
the advice that I try to give, whenever anybody will listen.”
Brett Tomlinson is an associate editor at PAW.
From top, Seth Priebatsch
’11 gives a winning presentation about SCVNGR; Christian Thériault
’07 is runner-up with a medical innovation; and Jennifer Howard
’09 and Tiffany Ko ’09 take third place with a Web portal
for learning-disabled children. (Photos by Frank Wojciechowski)
Ready
to launch
Students test ideas in business-plan contest
By Brett Tomlinson
Armed with laptops and laser pointers, about a dozen student entrepreneurs
have gathered in a lecture hall at the engineering school’s Friend
Center Feb. 23 for TigerLaunch, the University’s student-run business-plan
competition. The eight semifinalist teams, selected from 21 candidates
last fall, have spent dozens of hours researching their target markets
and crunching profitability figures. But at the competition’s first
round, most of that information takes a backseat to pithy talking points
as each team delivers a four-minute “elevator pitch.”
Seth Priebatsch ’11, a newcomer to the competition, is anxious
to talk about his company, SCVNGR, which creates high-tech scavenger hunts,
distributing clues and tracking progress through text messages to and
from the participants’ mobile phones. But the competition’s
four-minute limit makes him nervous. “It’s a really complex
idea, to get everything out and get it out clearly in four minutes,”
he says.
“I just didn’t feel like I was going to have enough time.”
As Priebatsch explains in his pitch, and in an extended presentation
later during the afternoon’s final round, text-message scavenger
hunts could tap several markets — tourists searching for something
to do in a new city, parents hoping to plan a fun and unique birthday
party for teens, and corporate clients looking for a fresh, tech-savvy
team-building activity. The judges are impressed, awarding
SCVNGR TigerLaunch’s top prize: $5,000, plus free legal services
to enable the company to incorporate.
While SCVNGR is the last team standing, it’s not the only one
with an innovative idea. Runner-up Princeton Biomedical, led by engineering
graduate student Christian Thériault ’07, presents a new
way to add texture to titanium orthopedic rods and screws, to promote
faster bone growth. Bethani Massey ’10, Jennifer Howard ’09,
and Tiffany Ko ’09 of BrightBox Learning, the third-place team,
plan to develop a comprehensive Web portal dedicated to the needs of the
nearly 3 million American children who have identified learning disabilities.
Other contestants include a team that hopes to use the virtual-reality
platform Second Life to provide property tours to prospective real-estate
buyers; an undergraduate who aims to build a more flexible alternative
to traditional math and physics textbooks, using digital media; and an
engineering Ph.D. candidate who wants to create an online invention marketplace
in which users could make small investments in promising, patentable ideas.
Any Princeton student who can find the time to put together a 40-page
business plan in the middle of the academic year is impressive, says Eric
Kutner ’95, a business development consultant in his second year
as a TigerLaunch judge. But winning a business-plan competition requires
an additional set of skills. Contestants differentiate themselves by presenting
their ideas, responding to questions, and being quick on their feet. “That’s
what business is — it’s adaptive,” Kutner says.
Priebatsch learns that lesson in the competition’s morning question-and-answer
session. SCVNGR’s initial plan is to create prepackaged scavenger
hunts that keep players interested with coupon-like incentives. A clue
leads the players to a park; when they reach the park successfully, a
text message tells them they’ve earned a free scoop of ice cream
at a nearby shop. Building a critical mass of willing sponsors will be
a challenge, Priebatsch says, and the judges “latched right onto
it.”
But Priebatsch’s marketing experience may have assuaged that concern.
In his senior year of high school, he launched a company called PostcardTech,
which creates postcard-sized mailers that contain mini-CDs, enabling clients
to send complex marketing at cheap postage rates. He continues to manage
that business from his dorm room, and with the $5,000 from TigerLaunch,
Priebatsch hopes to accelerate SCVNGR’s growth — if he can
carve a few more hours out of an already hectic schedule.
When he’s asked what drives his entrepreneurial spirit, the freshman
outlines the process of developing an idea, making it profitable, and
searching for new markets, but then pauses to reconsider. “Honestly,”
he says, “it’s just fun.”