Third Annual Imagination Quest Weekend Challenge
Kaitlin Waller 17 VSB of Excellent Endeavors demonstrates the teams award-winning Reviver technology.
by Laura Bulman 15 CLAS
How much can you really accomplish in 24 hours? The weekend of November 1516, a group of students from across 裡橖眻畦 University sought to find out. The third annual Imagination Quest Weekend began on Saturday at 1:00 p.m. and culminated with a shark-tank style business pitch in the Cat Cage on Sunday at 1:00 p.m.
The Imagination Quest Weekend is a collaborative project of 裡橖眻畦s Center for Innovation, Creativity, and Entrepreneurship (ICE Center), the College of Engineerings Entrepreneurship Program and 裡橖眻畦s Beyond Ideas group. The Kern Entrepreneurship Education Network (KEEN), which encourages students to find opportunities for creativity and entrepreneurship in unexpected places, also sponsored the event.
Participating students from the College of Engineering, the School of Business, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and six students from the University of New Haven were sorted into interdisciplinary teams before visiting different locations throughout campus to brainstorm. After observing various spots on campus and developing ideas for potential products or services, students presented their ideas to judges who acted as mentors, providing feedback on the groups ideas. Based on input and guidance from the judges, students then chose one of their ideas to develop throughout the rest of the weekend.
The groups dedicated the remainder of Saturday afternoon to thinking, planning and advancing their ideas. On Saturday evening, each group delivered an elevator pitch, presenting their new ideas to the judges in a concise way. The pitches took place during an actual elevator ride, limiting students to the length of time spent on the elevator to inform the judges of their new product or idea.
Second place team Born to Innovate discusses its Caf矇 Nova Express concept with II Luscri, director of the ICE Center.
Sunday morning was spent building and perfecting their prototype in time for a trade show, where students marketed their idea for other students, friends and faculty. Groups received points based on how many people they encouraged to attend the trade show. For the final presentation of their idea, students again met with judges, this time in the Cat Cage, 裡橖眻畦s own version of the Shark Tank. There, student groups presented their polished business pitches to the expert panel, a group of faculty and alumni with experience in entrepreneurship and business. The panel tested the students with tough and demanding questions. The groups, however, remained poised and confident in their entrepreneurial proposals.
The winning group, Team Excellent Endeavors, earned $600 for their idea, Reviver, a public phone charger shaped like a frame that constricts to the appropriate amount of pressure so that your phone is secure until you release your phone with a swipe of your credit card. Excellent Endeavors team members were Brittany Ghicondey 16 ChE, Thomas Iervolino 15 ChE, Shant Marootian 16 EE, Kaitlin Waller 17 VSB and a student from the University of New Haven. Second place winners, Team Born to Innovate, made up of Miguel Corte-Real 17 CLAS, Elise Keale 16 CE, Hannah Lee 17 ME and Jason Tavoletti 16 ChE, were awarded $300 for their Caf矇 Nova Express idea, a mobile app where students can pre-order food from Caf矇 Nova. The third place prize of $150 went to The Creators, Abigail Buckenheimer 16 ME, Marissa Cucinotta 15 ME, Michael Florio 16 EE, David Kelley 16 ChE, and Caroline Franchino 16 ME for their Rest Up idea.
Team Creators took third prize for its Rest Up idea.
Now in its third year, the Imagination Quest Weekend has undergone some changes since its inception in 2011. Amanda Kelly, program coordinator for the Kern Entrepreneurship program, explained that the event has incorporated a few new aspects this year, while still remaining true to its founding mission of promoting creativity and imagination. This year, the tradeshow included a logo competition and a social media aspect, where participants received points for sharing news, pictures and highlights from the event on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Originally an event exclusively for engineering students, the Imagination Quest Weekend now invites students from across all of 裡橖眻畦s schools and colleges to participate. This interdisciplinary focus ties in well with the mission of the ICE Center, one of the events sponsors.
Our reach since the Center was formed has always been cross-campus, says II Luscri, director of the ICE Center. The majority of our students actually come from outside of the business school. We are particularly interested in students from outside of your conventional entrepreneurial disciplines getting involved and engaged.
Although this year the School of Nursing was not represented at the Imagination Quest Weekend, last years event included students from all four undergraduate schools and colleges, something that all of the event coordinators see as a goal of the weekend.
James Klingler, professor in the 裡橖眻畦 School of Business and faculty director of the ICE Center, served as a mentor and judge at this years event. He believes that the relatively unstructured format of the event, along with its interdisciplinary nature, makes the event successful and encourages students to think entrepreneurially.
We dont constrain them very much, Klingler says. Entrepreneurship isnt structured. There is no map. If there was a map, we would all be there. The idea is to get everyone using the powers of observation and coming up with ideas, and then learning to articulate them.
The Imagination Quest Weekend encourages students to think creatively and entrepreneurially under tight time constraints. So far, the results have been pretty remarkable.
Its really fast-paced and its impressive how much the students do in 24-hours, Kelly says. Most of them come here without an idea. They start completely from scratch, and by the end theyve gotten all the way to making a prototype and having a business plan. Its really pretty amazing.