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STEM

Stampede.It takes first place at 鶹ƵStudent Sandbox Demo Day

Thursday, August 18, 2011, By J.D. Ross
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entrepreneurshipSchool of Information Studies

Seventeen teams of students and recent graduates from nine colleges across Upstate New York pitched their startup businesses Aug. 17 at the 鶹ƵStudent Sandbox Demo Day at the 鶹ƵTech Garden.

The is an incubator that helps aspiring young entrepreneurs move their ventures from the idea phase to a viable company. The Sandbox provides each team with a workspace, resources and access to five mentors in areas such as business development, design and law.

John Liddy, Entrepreneur in Residence at the Sandbox, is responsible for shepherding the teams through the process. “At the Sandbox, we give students a choice,” says Liddy. “They don’t just go to school to get a job, they go to school to create jobs.”

In its third year of hosting summer teams, the Sandbox has a strong track record. Forty percent of Sandbox companies are still in business, and of those, nearly three-quarters have chosen to stay in the Upstate New York region.

Standing on a stage in the AXA tower adjacent to the Tech Garden building in downtown Syracuse, each team was given five minutes to pitch their business idea to an audience of more than 200 venture capitalists, investors, academics and business people. The winning team, based on judges’ votes as well as audience votes, would receive $1,000.

The winner was , a web-based company that offers discounts on digital merchandise based on a group discount. Similar in practice to the popular deals site Groupon, Stampede.It focuses on digital content like games, apps and e-books.

Stampede.It is the brainchild of Justin Groden and Conrad Barrett. Groden is a 2008 graduate of Clarkson University, and Barrett is finishing up his studies at Monroe Community College and plans to head on to New York University.

The 鶹ƵStudent Sandbox is part of the (IDEA), and is sponsored at 鶹ƵUniversity by the School of Information Studies, the College of Visual and Performing Arts and the Whitman School of Management, and through an Enitiative award. is funded by a grant from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation of Kansas City, Mo., focusing on entrepreneurship in the arts, technology and neighborhoods.

PHOTO CAPTION: Justin Groden (left) and Conrad Barrett with their $1,000 prize.

PHOTO CREDIT: Maren Guse

  • Author

J.D. Ross

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