B@B Wins 2nd and 3rd Place at Ethereal Conference


Consensys hosted its first ever Ethereal Hackathon in partnership with Blockchain @ Berkeley on Saturday, Oct. 21 and 22nd. Consensys is a venture production studio and software development consultancy that builds enterprise solutions, decentralized applications, and other tools for the blockchain environment mostly centered on Ethereum (an open source blockchain based platform.

Blockchain is a resistant technology that can be useful for identity, asset transformations, and voting. It can also be used to form governance systems that help individuals or groups of people to make decisions using these shared resources by keeping information transparent to participants. This rigorous two-day hackathon took place at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business where over 20 teams were challenged to design a blockchain governance system that takes advantage of such affordances.

 

One team from Blockchain @ Berkeley took home third place of the conference and included one of SCET’s visiting students from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Federico Kunze. Federico and his fellow teammates created a solution called Athena that implements a stake based voting scheme, where shareholders can vote their own preferences based on whatever stake they own. Athena awards those who participate and equitably picks the outcome that is favored by everyone. It also incentivizes honest reporting of the voter’s preference.  

 

Athena (Back row from left to right: Avneet Saini, Kevin Chang, Jeremiah Andrews, Federico Kunze. Front row from left to right: Tammy Vu, Saroj Chintakrindi)

 

Everyone in the team that built Athena was able present their projects at Ethereal San Francisco on Oct. 27 in front of of Joseph Lubin, co-founder of Ethereum and founder of ConsenSys, along with many other leaders in the Blockchain space.  

The post B@B Wins 2nd and 3rd Place at Ethereal Conference appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link

UC Berkeley students create entrepreneurship bootcamp in Jordan


Founded by the students with the support of UC Berkeley professors, Startup With Purpose is an entrepreneurship bootcamp designed to teach students the Berkeley Method of Entrepreneurship. Successful entrepreneurs don’t achieve their success by accident; they weren’t just handed tools they needed to reach their goals. You don’t have to be Steve Jobs or Elon Musk to be a successful entrepreneur, but you do have to know how to innovate and bring your ideas to life, and more importantly, attract customers. But rarely in this world are the skills to do this taught — and this need as at the core of the founding of Startup With Purpose.

Startup With Purpose intends to teach its participants how to build the tools of success from within. At Startup With Purpose, participants will learn how to recognize the talent that they have within themselves, and how to perfectly match those with talents with others in their teams. Team cohesion and communication is vital, and participants learn to mold their teams into a potent force around a singular idea. So when our graduates go on to create their next startup, they are not just guessing what the right moves might be, they begin knowing many of the types of challenges they will end up facing.

The effectiveness of this the Berkeley Method of Entrepreneurship goes well beyond the classroom and starting companies. This became apparent in Nice, France as Berkeley participants in another Berkeley program were present during Bastille Day terrorist attack. Even while stricken with horror, they were able to organize themselves, locate those in danger, those who had fallen, and coordinate rescue efforts and ways to keep everyone safe indoors. It was not until days later that they realized the profound effect their training had on their actions, transforming them into a potent force of both organization and sheer will. Some of the major leaders that emerged from the Nice attack are at the core of the founding team of Startup With Purpose.

It doesn’t matter if it’s building a tech startup in a crowded economy, negotiating a post terror attack landscape in another country, or simply negotiate power dynamics in a Fortune 500 company, these are life changing lessons that are crucial navigating the world. It is imperative that these lessons are spread the world over, especially in places where the entrepreneurial mindset isn’t prevalent – and this is a major reason why we chose Jordan.

Jordan is distinctive in the region in that it produces a number of well educated and motivated individuals that are highly ambitious. However, sometimes they unfortunately fail to see the options right in front of them. In other words, despite drastic cultural differences – they’re just like us. Innovation is born out of challenge and dissonance, and we challenge students to step out of their own immediate comfort zone and expose themselves to a completely different atmosphere with students that are all striving to maximize their potential and contribute to their local communities and the world.

 

Students will be holding an info-session with the founders of Startup with Purpose where students can learn about this unique opportunity to be part of the bootcamp in Jordan.

Date and Time: November 14th  6 pm

Location: SCET Offices in the Memorial Stadium (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site., Room 122

Please RSVP here to attend.

Program dates: January 6 – January 13, 2018

Location: Amman, Jordan

Program Price: $1,000.00 (flight to Jordan not included)

* $500 discount available for financial aid recipients.

To apply visit http://startupwithpurpose.org/ 

Email questions to info@startupwithpurpose.net

The post UC Berkeley students create entrepreneurship bootcamp in Jordan appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link

UC Berkeley Students Create Entrepreneurship Bootcamp in Jordan


Founded by the students with the support of UC Berkeley professors, Startup With Purpose is an entrepreneurship boot camp designed to teach students the Berkeley Method of Entrepreneurship. Successful entrepreneurs don’t achieve their success by accident, they weren’t just handed tools they needed to reach their goals. You don’t have to be Steve Jobs or Elon Musk to be a successful Entrepreneur, but you do have to know how to innovate and bring your ideas to life, and more importantly, attract customers. But rarely in this world are the skills to do this taught – and this need as at the core of the founding of Startup With Purpose.

Startup With Purpose intends to teach its participants how to build the tools of success from within. At Startup With Purpose, participants will learn how to recognize the talent that they have within themselves, and how to perfectly match those with talents with others in their teams. Team cohesion and communication is vital, and participants learn to mold their teams into a potent force around a singular idea. So when our graduates go on to create their next startup, they are not just guessing what the right moves might be, they begin knowing many of the types of challenges they will end up facing.

The effectiveness of this the Berkeley Method of Entrepreneurship goes well beyond the classroom and starting companies. This became apparent in Nice, France as Berkeley participants in another Berkeley program were present during Bastille Day terrorist attack. Even while stricken with horror, they were able to organize themselves, locate those in danger, those who had fallen, and coordinate rescue efforts and ways to keep everyone safe indoors. It was not until days later that they realized the profound effect their training had on their actions, transforming them into a potent force of both organization and sheer will. Some of the major leaders that emerged from the Nice attack are at the core of the founding team of Startup With Purpose.

It doesn’t matter if it’s building a tech startup in a crowded economy, negotiating a post terror attack landscape in another country, or simply negotiate power dynamics in a Fortune 500 company, these are life changing lessons that are crucial navigating the world. It is imperative that these lessons are spread the world over, especially in places where the entrepreneurial mindset isn’t prevalent – and this is a major reason why we chose Jordan.

Jordan is distinctive in the region in that it produces a number of well educated and motivated individuals that are highly ambitious. However, sometimes they unfortunately fail to see the options right in front of them. In other words, despite drastic cultural differences – they’re just like us. Innovation is born out of challenge and dissonance, and we challenge students to step out of their own immediate comfort zone and expose themselves to a completely different atmosphere with students that are all striving to maximize their potential and contribute to their local communities and the world.

 

We will be holding an info-session with the founders of Startup with Purpose where students can learn about this unique opportunity to be part of the Bootcamp in Jordan.

Date and Time: November 14th  6 pm

Location: SCET Offices in the Memorial Stadium (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site., Room 122

Please RSVP here to attend.

Program dates: January 6 – January 13, 2018

Location: Amman, Jordan

Program Price: $1,000.00 (flight to Jordan not included)

* $500 discount available for financial aid recipients.

To apply visit http://startupwithpurpose.org/ 

Email questions to info@startupwithpurpose.net

The post UC Berkeley Students Create Entrepreneurship Bootcamp in Jordan appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link

Startup Semester: UNIST Spotlight


Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, or UNIST, is a leading university in South Korea that aims to immerse students in a creative and technical atmosphere to advance research. UNIST has four core strategies to achieve this:

  • Creativity: UNIST uses IT-based student-centered discussion learning similar to the “flipped classroom” concept rather than having regular lectures.
  • Interdisciplinary education: UNIST requires its students to complete two or more concentrations so that they can gain experience in multiple fields.
  • Globalization: All classes are taught in English and students are encouraged to visit other technologically advanced countries to develop a new understanding of science on a global scale.
  • Research-intensive: UNIST focuses much of its research on next-generation energy, advanced materials (bio, carbon, composite and energy).

Since UNIST is focused on developing research and making discoveries, they also have a strong focus on entrepreneurship and encourage the university students to pursue their own ventures. HeeJae Won, BeomSeok Kim, Chan Jang, Soohyung Park, and Dong-Eun Suh are visiting students partaking in the Startup Semester at the University of California at Berkeley to learn more about entrepreneurship in Silicon Valley. These students are working with Berkeley professors and researchers in hopes of bringing their newfound knowledge about developing startups back to UNIST in the spring.  

Startup Semester

Startup Semester is a program at Cal run by the Sutardja Center for Entrepreneurship & Technology where visiting students from around the world come together to learn about developing their own startups. Startup Semester helps students to commercialize research and enhance their knowledge on science and technology.

When asked about how Startup Semester works, Dong-Eun Suh emphasized how she is able to connect with venture capitalists and receive feedback from them, informing how to move forward in her research. She mentioned that it was a remarkable experience to come to class and negotiate how to get funding from VC’s.

HeeJae came to Berkeley because he is in the beginning stages for his startup and wanted to learn from professors on what he can do to develop it. HeeJae is working on a music application that helps experts more easily practice and prevent music composers from creating too similar or already published pieces. HeeJae would do this by comparing the data that is collected and seeing how similar a certain piece is to an original.

Chan Jang is the only developer on the team and is embarking on his own startup journey at Berkeley. He wants to create a form of eSports (electronic sports), which is a type of gaming where players and teams are mediated by computer systems.

Dong-Eun Suh is working on a research study where she is purifying recycling plastics through a digester tank filled with bacteria. After Dongeun found this bacteria from a bug, she patented i the unique method she used to purify the plastics. To further her research, she worked on discovering how she can commercialize this digester tank, in order to enhance the quality of recycled plastic. She also have met the former researcher working on only styrofoam, in Stanford. The first time she met this researcher was when she got the Tony B. Academic Travel Award to present her work in Washington D.C., SLAS 2017. After coming over Startup Semester, she was able to meet him again and discuss collaboration and further progression.

The UNIST team mentioned how thankful they were to have Rick Rasmussen as a mentor at Startup Semester because he has helped them learn how to manage their time and how to improve their ideas through experimenting and optimizing. The team mentioned how before coming to Berkeley they needed to work on building their business skills and how to frame a business model or how to gauge product-market fit. After being enrolled in Startup Semester they have learned more about finance and how to create a business plan from the ground up.

The post Startup Semester: UNIST Spotlight appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link

Steve Blank helps Sutardja Center execs innovate at 50x


The world is being Amazoned.

That is what startup legend Steve Blank argued last week at the Sutardja Center’s innovation leadership executive program — an annual summit of executives from around the world who come to Berkeley to learn how to make their companies more innovative.

Things are quite different in the Amazon-age than they were in the 20th century, when executives at large companies had plenty of time to make decisions, according to Blank. Back then, companies mostly competed against companies similar to their own, and owned a large share of the market that they could hold on to with reliable business models. However, in the 21st, the startup movement has caused things to move much more quickly.

The psyche of disruption has changed the world. Blank calls this the “red queen problem,” a reference to a quote by the red queen in Alice in Wonderland when she says “you will have to run twice as fast just to stay in place.” Many executives at large companies can empathize.

Indeed, large companies today are at big risk of being disrupted by the nimble startup. Recent advances in technology have made the physical barriers to entry for new companies lower than ever before. And unlike in the 20th century, startups today are receiving huge investments from venture capitalists who hope that one startup in their entire portfolio might disrupt an entire industry and make them rich.

Because venture capitalists bet on their portfolio succeeding, and not on any single company, they can take huge risks that large companies cannot take. For example, venture capitalists are happy to bet on companies, like Uber and AirBnB, that have a chance to revolutionize an industry even if they might be breaking the law — a bet large companies cannot take.

Add this to the fact that startups have few policies and little bureaucracy to slow down decision-making, and it starts to seem like large companies may even be the underdog.

So, can large companies keep up with the nimble startup?

Blank suggests that large companies can keep up by becoming ambidextrous organizations, i.e. innovating and executing at the same time.

“That was nice theory in the 20th century,” Blank said of the theory of ambidextrous organizations, “It is survival today.”

While many executives give lip service to being innovative, Blank believes that companies need to create processes, institutions, roles, and metrics to actually innovate.

One approach is to create a separate innovation institution within a large company where entirely new inventions are created as opposed to the incremental improvements that might occur as part of the normal process of developing products. These small innovation organizations can be removed from company bureaucracy to act more like a startup and have different relationships with risk, failure, and more urgent approaches for developing new products.

Steve shows Buzz Aldrin’s expense report that he had to fill out after landing on the moon. Innovators should be isolated from bureaucracy as much as possible.

Some companies already do innovation activities such as hackathons, research projects, university engagement, and some even have dedicated maker spaces where employees can be creative. But, for Blank, these innovation activities (which can sometimes degrade into “innovation theater”) are not enough and may even be harmful as untested guesses can create “noise” for engineers and other implementers.

“In my world we turn pieces into a process,” said Blank about the proper way to organize innovation activities.

Blank suggests that these activities can work really well when they are put into an innovation process where companies explore and test new ideas, incubate them, and then integrate them back into the rest of the company when and if the time is right.

To do this, Blank suggests companies use Alex Osterwalder’s Business Model Canvas, a way to show an entire business model for a company or product in a single diagram. Filling out the canvas is not only a useful process for the innovator, but makes communicating the business ideas to others easier as well. Maybe most importantly, it also makes it clear which parts of the business model are guesses, and need testing.

And it is testing these guesses, or hypotheses, that is vital to customer development, an approach that Blank is famous for pioneering. In the past, innovators tended to make assumptions about what their customers wanted. Innovators would then go on to create alpha and beta tests of their product, launch the product, and then watch as some products would succeed and some would fail because of false or correct assumptions.

Thanks to Blank and other pioneers in this field, modern entrepreneurship is focused more on discovering what customers truly want and need before wasting resources on building anything. Blank believes that entrepreneurs and innovators need to get outside of their building to talk to real customers as early in the development process as possible.

He contends that the best way to develop products is by creating hypotheses about your products and then testing them, which usually involves talking to hundreds of real potential customers. And if you are innovating inside a company, talking to dozens more on the inside who will have a stake in the product you are developing. The earlier in the process that you can find out what customers and colleagues like and do not like, the fewer problems that will come up later.

If the process of creating hypotheses, testing them against empirical data, and using the results to support a theory sound familiar — it should. That’s because it’s the scientific method we all learned in middle school and that has also been around for the past 500 years.

Blank suggests entrepreneurs should use the scientific method when developing companies and products. By testing minimum viable products (MVPs), innovators can learn what customers actually want without having to guess.

For Blank, an MVP is the “smallest thing that will give you the most learning or feedback.”  So, rather than building an alpha version of your product, or barebones app without any features, an MVP may be as simple as drawing your app on a piece of paper, or creating a powerpoint slide that you can show to a potential customer to see if they like it.

“You have to get out of the building to understand the delta rate of change,” Blank said to the executives who were doing just that by being at the program.

 

The post Steve Blank helps Sutardja Center execs innovate at 50x appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link

Haas Alum and Traveling Spoon Co-Founder Aashi Vel encourages students to pursue ventures that ‘tug at their heart’


Students in the A. Richard Newton Lecture Series attended a fireside chat with Cal alum and Traveling Spoon Co-founder Aashi Vel. Since graduating in 2011 with an MBA from the Haas School of Business, Vel and her partner Steph Lawrence have turned Traveling Spoon into a business venture spanning 18 countries and counting. During her talk, Vel shared an interesting argument about why entrepreneurs should pursue projects they actually care about as well as the three best lessons she has learned as an entrepreneur.


After working as an industrial engineer for over a decade, Aashi Vel entered Haas Business School with the intention of making her passion for food and travel into a marketable business.

Traveling Spoon was born out of a consistent problem Vel encountered when traveling: She would ask friends for recommendations and spend a significant amount of time researching the “best” and most “authentic” restaurants, only to be disappointed by the crowded and touristy places she would eat. Vel wondered what her experiences would have been like if she was in a local’s home eating and cooking with them.

A big challenge that worried Vel and her co-founder Steph Lawrence was finding hosts. Would residents really open their homes and make home-cooked meals for complete strangers?

The summer after her first year at Haas, Vel traveled to India on her own dime in hopes of recruiting hosts who would do just that. To her surprise, the hosts she stumbled upon actually were interested in opening up their homes to strangers for a multitude of reasons: some wanted to practice English, some were lonely mothers with empty nests, and some wanted the extra cash to help supplement their income. In three and a half weeks, Vel managed to recruit forty hosts to partake in the pilot program, learning that finding hosts was not nearly as big of a challenge as she’d previously thought it would be. Similarly, the enthusiasm they received from future hosts made Vel and Lawrence feel like they were on to something, that there really was a market there.

And now that Traveling Spoon had discovered that there was a market for hosts, Vel and Lawrence turned their efforts to finding customers. Would other tourists share her passion for authentic food and be willing to enter the home of a stranger in a strange land?

To her delight, Vel quickly found out that the answer was a definite yes. Soon, they saw that people from all income brackets were signing up to use Traveling Spoon, trading in more upscale restaurants for the authentic experiences. Their customer reviews were exceedingly positive, prompting Vel and Lawrence to pursue the venture full time after graduating from Haas.

Since then, Traveling Spoon has gone on to form partnerships with Expedia and Trip Advisor as well as garner well-known supporters like celebrity chef Alice Waters and former Expedia CEO Erik Blachford.

Through this experience, Vel learned a lot and offered three pieces of advice to burgeoning entrepreneurs. First, Vel encouraged future founders to not be afraid of sharing their startup ideas. Next, she recommended that whenever possible, founders seek advice from people they respect and trust. Finally, Vel stressed the importance of knowing what you want and asking for it. In the startup world, Vel said, being direct is a valued commodity.

Overall, however, the most important pieces of advice Vel offered was pursuing ventures you are genuinely interested in. Career decisions and pivots are incredibly personal, according to Vel, but your gut should have some say in the decisions you choose.

At the end of the fireside chat, Vel recited a quote she had once heard that she felt perfectly summed up her experience as a founder.

“Changing the world means solving a problem that tugs at your heart,” Vel said.

The post Haas Alum and Traveling Spoon Co-Founder Aashi Vel encourages students to pursue ventures that ‘tug at their heart’ appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link

UC Berkeley tops 2017 PitchBook Report


Located in the heart of Silicon Valley, the University of California Berkeley, is known for its extremely rigorous courses that encourage students to reach their full potential. This, along with a vast entrepreneurship network, is why UC Berkeley has topped PitchBook’s ranking list for entrepreneur count for three years in a row. PitchBook’s Annual Top 50 Universities Report provides an extensive overlook of the venture capital industry within the scope of universities’ programs. The recently released 2017-2018 edition includes data on the “Top Universities for VC-backed Entrepreneurs”, “Top Companies by Capital Raised”, and much more. Overall, UC Berkeley is notably the top public university on the list of undergraduate programs, coming in a close second to Stanford, with an entrepreneur count of 1089, company count of 961, and capital raised at $17,050 million.

Cal also came in second for the “Capital Raised” category. The top five companies that raised the most capital include: Cloudera, Zynga, Auris Surgical Robotics, Machine Zone, and Sapphire Energy. It is Auris Surgical Robotics’ first year on the list. The other four companies made it to the top of the last year’s list in the 2016 PitchBook report.

In the section for Female Founders, while UC Berkeley fell from second to third place from last year, the amount of capital raised by these women-founded companies is almost equivalent to that of Stanford, which is in first place. Last year, female-led companies of UC Berkeley alumni raised around $1,479 M, whereas this year they raised $1,678 M. This section features five top female-led Berkeley-associated companies: Sapphire Energy, One Kings Lane, Quantenna Communications, Terra Bella, and Millendo Therapeutics.

Within the Sector Breakdown category, UC Berkeley is ranked #1 with a total of 960 companies. The largest sector at 47.1% represents the fact that a majority of UC Berkeley’s companies have to do with software. Other highly ranked universities’ companies are mainly in the software industry as well.

Overall, PitchBook emphasizes the impactful nature of  investment funds and affiliations with VCs in surrounding areas “on the number of students that pursue their ambitions to start a company of their own.”  The network effect is prevalent in the venture capital industry, and the report aims to display the quantitative evidence behind the positive influence of entrepreneurial networks. Here at Berkeley, where a high emphasis is placed on the maintaining its robust entrepreneurial networks, The Berkeley Gateway to Innovation (BEGIN) initiative has curated a website for the entrepreneurship community on campus with lists of resources available at Berkeley to educate entrepreneurs, commercialize research, and advance startups.

 

The post UC Berkeley tops 2017 PitchBook Report appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link

MyShake App Founders Utilize Sutardja Center Course to Grow Their Business


 

Here at the Sutardja Center for Entrepreneurship & Technology, innovators from a variety of fields utilize the Center’s resources to further their pursuits. MyShake is a prime example of an academic pursuit turned startup venture that took advantage of the opportunities we offer. To learn more about how you can commercialize your research at the Sutardja Center’s Management of Technology Innovation (MTI) course mentioned below, please click here.


Bay Area residents are no strangers to earthquakes. In fact, with historic quakes like the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and the 2014 Napa earthquake in the not too distant past, earthquake early warning systems are practical and precautionary steps that would enormously benefit residents and businesses in the bay and beyond. That is why Berkeley Seismology Ph.D candidate Qingkai Kong and his advisor, Richard Allen, decided to turn their groundbreaking research into an entrepreneurial pursuit. With the help of the Sutardja Center’s Management of Technology Innovation (MTI) course as well as the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) I-Corps program, Kong and Allen were able to learn not only how to go about starting a company, but also how to create a product consumers will actually use.

Their app, MyShake, was born out of Kong’s Ph.D. research in which he developed an artificial neural network enabling sensors in cell phones to distinguish between human movement and earthquakes. Therefore, when an earthquake strikes, a cell phone in the epicenter will detect it and enable the network to send messages to other phones miles away, resulting in people knowing an earthquake will strike seconds or even minutes before it reaches them.

And while a couple seconds may not seem like a lot of time, it in fact could have major safety implications. Take the example of the Loma Prieta earthquake. According to Allen, over 50% of the injuries were due to falling objects, therefore, if people were given a couple seconds notice to take cover before the quake hit, many of those injuries could have been avoided.

Due to its huge potential impact,, Kong and Allen decided to go forward with the MyShake project and released a prototype system in February 2016,  amassing over 270,000 global users since. Kong and Allen knew they were on to something big, and in order to better familiarize themselves with the startup world and to figure out how to take MyShake to the next level, they decided to enroll in the Sutardja Center’s MTI course this past Spring semester. Through the MTI course, Kong and Allen were put in touch with the I-Corps program. The guidance the MyShake team received from these two programs led them to two important pivots in their product:

First, Kong and Allen realized during their MTI course that people are not willing to pay for apps, so their idea of a monthly subscription fee was out the window. Second, and more importantly, the MyShake duo discovered during their training with I-Corps that people actually do not want to know when the next earthquake will strike.

“We can sit here and say, ‘That absolutely everyone cares about earthquakes, they have to right?’”Allen said. “And of course, it turns out that they really don’t, and they don’t even want to be reminded about earthquakes.”

So, in order to make their product viable, Kong and Allen had to reevaluate if there were even consumers in the market for their product. And it turns out there were: insurance companies. By having access to the data that the MyShake app is collecting, Kong said, insurance companies are able to better structure their risk models for the future so that they can better estimate the financial losses earthquakes could cause.

“What we realized is that we need to do more because of these pivots to develop and demonstrate how this data can be used,” Allen said. “So our plan is to do that development and to stay engaged with these groups who we think are interested in using the data.”

 

The post MyShake App Founders Utilize Sutardja Center Course to Grow Their Business appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link

Predicting the next ‘Big One’: SCET earthquake researchers find business model when most would rather not know


 

Here at the Sutardja Center for Entrepreneurship & Technology, innovators from a variety of fields utilize the Center’s resources to further their pursuits. MyShake is a prime example of an academic pursuit turned startup venture that took advantage of the opportunities we offer. To learn more about how you can commercialize your research at the Sutardja Center’s Management of Technology Innovation (MTI) course mentioned below, please click here.


Bay Area residents are no strangers to earthquakes. In fact, with historic quakes like the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and the 2014 Napa earthquake in the not too distant past, earthquake early warning systems are practical and precautionary steps that would enormously benefit residents and businesses in the bay and beyond. That is why Berkeley Seismology Ph.D candidate Qingkai Kong and his advisor, Richard Allen, decided to turn their groundbreaking research into an entrepreneurial pursuit. With the help of the Sutardja Center’s Management of Technology Innovation (MTI) course as well as the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) I-Corps program, Kong and Allen were able to learn not only how to go about starting a company, but also how to create a product consumers will actually use.

Their app, MyShake, was born out of Kong’s Ph.D. research in which he developed an artificial neural network enabling sensors in cell phones to distinguish between human movement and earthquakes. Therefore, when an earthquake strikes, a cell phone in the epicenter will detect it and enable the network to send messages to other phones miles away, resulting in people knowing an earthquake will strike seconds or even minutes before it reaches them.

And while a couple seconds may not seem like a lot of time, it in fact could have major safety implications. Take the example of the Loma Prieta earthquake. According to Allen, over 50% of the injuries were due to falling objects, therefore, if people were given a couple seconds notice to take cover before the quake hit, many of those injuries could have been avoided.

Due to its huge potential impact, Kong and Allen decided to go forward with the MyShake project and released a prototype system in February 2016,  amassing over 270,000 global users since. Kong and Allen knew they were on to something big, and in order to better familiarize themselves with the startup world and to figure out how to take MyShake to the next level, they decided to enroll in the Sutardja Center’s MTI course this past Spring semester. Through the MTI course, Kong and Allen were put in touch with the I-Corps program. The guidance the MyShake team received from these two programs led them to two important pivots in their product:

First, Kong and Allen realized during their MTI course that people are not willing to pay for apps, so their idea of a monthly subscription fee was out the window. Second, and more importantly, the MyShake duo discovered during their training with I-Corps that people actually do not want to know when the next earthquake will strike.

“We can sit here and say, ‘That absolutely everyone cares about earthquakes, they have to right?’” Allen said. “And of course, it turns out that they really don’t, and they don’t even want to be reminded about earthquakes.”

So, in order to make their product viable, Kong and Allen had to reevaluate if there were even consumers in the market for their product. And it turns out there were: insurance companies. By having access to the data that the MyShake app is collecting, Kong said, insurance companies are able to better structure their risk models for the future so that they can better estimate the financial losses earthquakes could cause.

“What we realized is that we need to do more because of these pivots to develop and demonstrate how this data can be used,” Allen said. “So our plan is to do that development and to stay engaged with these groups who we think are interested in using the data.”

 

The post Predicting the next ‘Big One’: SCET earthquake researchers find business model when most would rather not know appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link

Chef Dave Anderson on alternative meats: sustainable solution and big opportunity for entrepreneurs


During the Sutardja Center’s Alt.meat Challenge Lab course, Chef Dave Anderson walked students through his career path in the meat analog industry, imparting his view on why this emerging field is important more now than ever before.

Prior to his success as a vegan chef, Anderson’s passions lied far outside of the food industry. Determined to be the next Jimmy Page, Anderson spent his college years pursuing his love for music as a student at the Berklee College of Music instead of studying recipes and concocting meat alternatives. But his brother, who became a vegetarian after reading Diet for a Small Planet, managed to convert Anderson to his meatless ways, spurring Anderson’s initial interest in finding alternative meat options.

Anderson then found himself in an unusual predicament: Despite dreams of making a career out of playing the guitar, Anderson was instead supplementing his income by working in restaurants cooking meat, all the while, he was a vegetarian surrounded by subpar meat alternatives.

Eventually, this contradiction grew to be too much, and he made the decision to refocus the dedication and passion he brought to music to finding more high-quality food options for vegetarians like himself. He went on to pursue classical chef training at Johnson & Wales University, going on to apply his education in new and innovative ways to create original vegetarian cuisine.

Over the next two decades, Anderson would to open his own high-end vegan restaurant, Madeleine Bistro, as well as develop well-received meat alternatives with the likes of Hampton Creek, New Crop Capital, Beyond Meat, and Outstanding Foods.

Anderson explained to the class of Berkeley students that while he was personally invested in finding meat alternatives because of his love for animals and the environment, the industry has more than just a moral appeal. The world’s food supply, Anderson said, is coming face to face with critical issues, such as overpopulation, less and less land for food production, dwindling water supplies, and the environmental consequences of food production.

It is not a question of if these resources are going to cause serious harm to the global economy and our environment, Anderson said, it is just a question of when. And the people with the solutions to these crises will be in a powerful financial position according to Anderson.

“It’s a big problem…what we’ve got here at this point,” Anderson said. “But, obviously — and you guys are here as entrepreneurs — it’s a huge opportunity too.”

The post Chef Dave Anderson on alternative meats: sustainable solution and big opportunity for entrepreneurs appeared first on UC Berkeley Sutardja Center.



Source link