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The Weekend Treasure: like Groupon with a running start

Coming soon: a mad dash. The Weekend Treasure does discounters like Groupon and Amazon Local one better. Each week, subscribers will receive an email with two clues as to where a giveaway will take place over the weekend.

"The email features a local product from a local merchant that's 100 dollars or less in value," says founder Dave Clarke, who has his sights set on the demographic of 22 to 40 year old urban professionals. "The idea is if you want it and love it, and you can figure out the clues and find it, it's yours." It will be Clarke himself standing at the destination with product in hand.

Riffing off the very popular phenomenon of City Chase and other urban scavenger hunts, Clarke says The Weekend Treasure was one of those two in the morning jump out of bed ideas (and seriously, has nothing to do with the fact that Clarke in getting married in a month). "No one is doing this type of thing. By no means do I think I am going to conquer Groupon or Living Social. I am interested in the idea of creating instant delight," says Clarke, who cites recent work with a behavioral psychologist as inspiration for The Weekend Treasure.

Now in pre-launch, with a goal to roll out this spring, The Weekend Treasure will also reward runners up with a discount at the featured merchant. "We'd like to prove it will actually drive traffic," says Clarke. "If a merchant is giving away a hundred dollar product and we drive 2 customers, that's a win. A small win, but better than ecommerce." There is an exhaustion in the marketplace due to the proliferation of email coupon businesses that have jumped on the Groupon train.

Clarke also runs AuthenticMatters, a digital communications consultancy, but says The Weekend Treasure has been gaining mindshare over the past three or four months. Urban adventurers can sign up via The Weekend Treasure's Launchrock powered home page. And Clarke promises he will keep the contest clean. "It's not going to be weird where you have to crawl in a sewer."

Source: Dave Clarke, The Weekend Treasure
Writer: Sue Spolan

Interact app launches, knows where you are

Really, it's not stalking. Interact, launched in open beta on April 4 for iOS, is a mobile app that tells you who's nearby, even if you are not yet friends. The ambient location tool created by Anthony Coombs scrapes Facebook data so that when you launch Interact, you get a screen populated with people who are a set distance from you. But it's not creepy, says Coombs. "On a scale of 1 to 10, it's a 2."

Coombs built the app, which joins competitors Banjo, Highlight and Sonar, to foster and facilitate human interaction. "I'm pretty sure human beings connected before the iPhone. What we are doing is mimicking real life human interaction and using the iPhone as a conduit," says Coombs.

Ambient location apps were the talk of SXSWi this year. What sets Interact apart, says Coombs, is that the user can specify business or pleasure.

You are in a cafe and it's love at first sight. Turn on Interact and if your potential paramour is on Facebook, suddenly you have intel. Interact provides a first name, picture and common interests. You both like Led Zeppelin and bowling? It's on. If you both have iPhones, one better. Interact allows users to send a direct text. Coombs is planning an Android rollout as well, but chose to begin with one platform to work out the bugs.

Interact also allows you to specify that you are all work and no play to assist in creating business connections. You can set the geosocial interaction app to check for connections up to 25 miles away. Coombs stresses the privacy controls built into the app missing in others of its ilk. A user can appear invisible, and Interact does not employ GPS to constantly track users. "When I use the app, this is my location," says Coombs. "The app is stamping, not following you."

On the marketing front, Interact is launching a contest to find the most connected college student in Philadelphia. On April 23, Coombs will present A Guide to Building Location Based Social Networks at Philly Tech Week.

Coombs is now actively seeking a few good developers to bring Interact to the next level, and is also seeking user feedback. The app is free and available in the iTunes store.

Source: Anthony Coombs, Interact
Writer: Sue Spolan

Announcing the world's first Healthcare Startup Weekend, to take place in Philadelphia on June 1

While Philadelphia Startup Weekend prepares for the sold out 3.0 edition, organizers have just announced Startup Weekend Health Philadelphia.

The first of its kind in the world, the June 1 event will take place at Venturef0rth and is co-organized by Elliot Menschik, who already possesses a background that blends entrepreneurship and medicine.

Menschik gets an increasing number of calls from healthcare colleagues seeking tech solutions. He says, "Healthcare so lags behind the pace of change in mobile and analytics. As soon as you step into the healthcare domain all that efficiency and convenience goes out the window. Both practitioners and consumers experience this on a daily basis."

Menschik, who founded and sold the startup HxTechnologies, says this lag is the reason he got into healthcare IT in the first place. "There's so much opportunity and it's why it deserves its own weekend."

Philadelphia is just the place for the specialty startup weekend due to its position in both the medical past and present. He writes in the event blog, "From the biopharma corridor to world-class hospitals, medical schools, research institutions, health plans, associations and non-profits, you’d be hard pressed to find another city so immersed in all things medical.  So it’s only fitting that Startup Weekend hold its first-ever Healthcare-only Startup Weekend in the same place as the nation’s first hospital (1751), first medical school (1765), and many other firsts."

Also, Menschik is hoping that potential sponsors, which would include providers, hospitals, insurance providers, and CROs, would not just kick in money, but would send a rep to present a problem. "Ultimately we would like to have sponsors who will alpha or beta test products. The hardest thing is getting a place to test in a field where customers are so conservative," says Menschik.

Meanwhile, the already sold out Philly Startup Weekend 3.0, the general all purpose edition, will take place April 20-22 at The University of the Arts. Says co-organizer Brad Oyler of this year's improvements, "We are switching from mentors to coaches as an experiment to get coaches more involved with Startup Weekend teams, and we are going for a more social version this time, with a nightly team bonding event outside of the venue." Oyler thinks PHLSW 3.0 will be orders of magnitude better than 2.0 in October, 2011.

Source: Elliot Menschik, Brad Oyler, Philadelphia Startup Weekend
Writer: Sue Spolan

Coworking update: Indy Hall readies for expansion; Venturef0rth up to three companies

Coworking is exploding in Philadelphia. Venturef0rth, at 8th and Callowhill, stands apart as an entrepreneurial lab hewn from science. All that's missing are the white coats. 
 
Meanwhile, the venerable Indy Hall, in operation since 2007, announced on Thursday it is planning on expanding into a street level storefront at 20 N. 3rd in Old City. Alex Hillman, who led the town hall meeting with founding partner  Geoff DiMasi, says, "We've had a waiting list since September, and it's been growing faster than it's been shrinking. These aren't just people looking for an office, they're people who want to join Indy Hall." Now with a total of 153 members at all levels, Indy Hall exudes a clubhouse cool. The lively, art filled space has an underground feel.
 
The plan, according to Hillman, is to take over the downstairs where Indy Hall now occupies the second floor, and install a staircase connecting the two floors internally. Adding a pedestrian friendly entry will greatly increase eyes on Indy Hall, and potentially attract more members, but the challenge lies in getting the right storefront presence. A cafe and pop up shops were mentioned at Thursday night's meeting. The estimated total cost of expansion is $60,000, according to Hillman, who is aiming for a quick May 1 deadline.
 
Over at Venturef0rth, which pays tribute to the hacker ethic with a zero in the name, Elliot Menschik, impressively credentialed and successfully exited, has teamed up with Jay Shah and Jesse Kramer to create a soaring, pristine space that currently houses three startups: Lessonsmith, and recent DreamIt grads Metalayer and Grassroots Unwired. "At full capacity we could hold 100 people here working full-time," says Menschik. "That would compromise some of the common space, so a good place would be 60-75 people, with 20 companies or so."
 
Both Venturef0rth and Indy Hall plan on events to engage the community; Indy Hall's expansion plan includes a classroom and team spaces for companies that have outgrown individual desks but want to stay in the community and act as mentors. At Thursday's town hall meeting, Councilman Bill Green was in attendance; at this weekend's Lean Startup Machine seminar at Venturef0rth, Mayor Michael Nutter dropped by.
 
Hillman and Menschik exude magnetic charm, albeit in different styles, and it's easy to see why startups would choose either camp. But are there hundreds of people in Philadelphia to populate these and other recently opened, more specialized coworking spaces like Green Village, Philadelphia Game Lab and SeedPhilly?

Source: Elliot Menschik, Venturef0rth; Alex Hillman, Indy Hall
Writer: Sue Spolan

Photos: Indy Hall (top) and Venturef0rth.

Ajungo launches complete revamp of social travel site

Ajungo, launched in Philadelphia last fall, has just implemented a complete revamp of its website. The idea behind Ajungo is to go one better than sites like TripAdvisor and Yelp, offering travel tips and information from people to whom you are already connected on social media networks.

Steve Shea, co-founder of Ajungo along with Mike Wham (yes, it is his real name), says the redesign cuts down on home page copy and gives users a faster track to what they need. Behind the scenes, says Shea, is a sophisticated aggregation and data mining process that figures out from where users have been and are going from Facebook posts and Foursquare check-ins, to name a few. "We were trying to solve the user experience so that the traveler could come to one centralized place and plan out a trip from a social perspective."

On the new version, users can sort based on friends' checkins, and search for specifics like which hotel was favored by LinkedIn colleagues. "My mom is not going to stay in a scary hotel," says Shea. "If she likes it, I'll like it."

Ajungo now has seven full time employees, up from two in October, but is not yet in a brick and mortar location. Shea and Wham raised an initial seed round from family and friends, and are now in the midst of raising $1.5 million series A funding.

"Our current budget is tapped," says Shea. Until more money comes in, he is making a deal with new employees. "We've worked out contracts where they'll come on now, and we pay them small monthly retainers. Once we raise funding, they will get paid first."

Shea and Wham just brought on board a former executive from British Airways Worldwide who is helping open a lot of travel doors. "The way we see Ajungo in its ultimate iteration," says Wham, "is as a place to research and book everything you need for your trip."

Source: Steve Shea, Ajungo
Writer: Sue Spolan

Inside Philly SEED's wildly successful, crowdfunded night for education entrepreneurs

When you are talking sustenance, the combination of education and a hot meal is just about ideal. Philasoup, along with Springboard Collaborative, won top prize at Philly SEED, a new crowdfunded gathering specifically for educational entrepreneurs in the style of PhillyStake.

Philasoup's top spot in the Emerging Entrepreneurs category garnered $5,000. Springboard Collaborative, won the Expanding/Established Entrepreneurs category, receiving a bundle of pro-bono services. Funds were collected via ticket sales, as well as from a Knight Foundation grant.

The two winners were chosen from an original 41 applicants and 12 finalists, which included ApprenNet, The School Collective, Lessonsmith, Yes! for Schools Philly, and Investing in Ourselves. Educational entrepreneurs are hot right now; last month's Philly Tech Meetup focused on the same topic.

The awards ceremony took place at WHYY on Wednesday, March 28 to a packed house of nearly 200 people, a number of whom were also members of Young Involved Philly, which has a great track record of getting people out to events. Councilman Bill Green was on hand as co-host, as were several Philadelphia philanthropists.

Rachel Meadows, who works for Councilman Bill Green event organizer for Philly SEED, a member of PhillyCORE Leaders, says she hopes the event will be take place at least annually, if not more frequently.  "There's an audience for these type of events. I think people have realized that bureaucratic change is difficult, so perhaps bottom-up entrepreneurial efforts are more effective."

Kristen Forbriger, the Communications Manager for the Philadelphia School Partnership, looked around at the young, engaged crowd and remarked, "This represents a lot of energy in the city. There are a lot of tough problems to solve and a lot of people wanting to solve those problems."

The winner, Philasoup, will use its award to host a monthly microgrant dinner where educators connect and fund projects to benefit Philadelphia students, regardless of institution.

Source: Rachel Meadows, Kristen Forbinger, Philly SEED
Writer: Sue Spolan

Romancing the data: Plehn Analytics seeks investment for its government-sourced financial reports

Talk about harmony in data. Plehn Analytics is the first company of its kind to produce financial reports with information sourced directly from a range of government agencies including IRS tax returns. The data remains confidential.

Jose Plehn-Dujowich, co-founder of Plehn Analytics, comes from an academic background, and is still a professor at Temple's Fox School of Business
 
"I have a long history of doing academic research and consulting," says Plehn-Dujowich. "There's great value in a lot of the data collected by the federal government, but there is very little in digestible format." With every agency collecting data in its own way, it was a challenge to be able to make sense out of all the data.
 
Plehn-Dujowich won first place at the 2011 Be Your Own Boss competition at Fox; the fledgling company was the recipient of a cash prize, software and services from which Plehn Analytics continues to benefit.  It was out of that competition that Plehn-Dujowich met co-founders Dr. Ivan Ruzic, who now serves as President & CEO; and Kevin Sheetz, Plehn's Managing Director of Banking.
 
This is Plehn-Dujowich's last semester at Temple. He is leaving his tenure-track position to focus full time on the company, which recently received a $150,000 grant from Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Southeastern PA and also received $220,000 from a combination of angel investors and company management.
 
Sheetz says that the proprietary software is in beta test mode with three accounting and auditing companies, and in the next month or two will enter full force into the marketplace. "One of the main areas of focus for Plehn is benchmarking, understanding client performance in relation to its peer group," says Sheetz. "Our data allows you to get very granular, comparing your company to those of comparable size in the marketplace."
 
Plehn, with a total of 30 full and part time employees, has just begun its next investment found, seeking to raise $500,000.

Source: Jose Plehn-Dujowich, Kevin Sheetz, Plehn Analytics
Writer: Sue Spolan

Entrepreneurial matchmaker Co-Eounders Lab grows to 200 members, plans expansion to L.A., N.Y.

Meet Carlton and Joe. Before Co-Founders Lab, they were just two lonely entrepreneurs with great ideas but no one with whom to share their passion. "I was at a point in my entrepreneurial endeavors where I wanted to start something, but failed numerous times finding the right person due to commitments to the business on their end," says Joe Dickinson.
 
"I had a great idea, but didn’t have the technical skills to create the product myself," says Carlton Bowers. "I needed to find somebody who would be committed not only on the technical side of things, but also as a co-founder who simply shared my vision and cared about the success of the company."
 
After a five minute search on the Co-founders Lab website, Carlton emailed Joe and the two teamed up to create FannedUp, which combines a love of sports with social networking. Co-Founders Lab, created in DC and now in the Philadelphia market, is OKCupid for entrepreneurs.

The website is designed to match founders, and is augmented by meetups that take place in King of Prussia every two to three months. The next on May 9 will mark the one year anniversary of Co-Founder's Lab's presence in Philadelphia, which has grown to 200 members, according to Shahab Kaviani, himself a co-founder of Co-Founder's Lab.
 
"You need someone to complement you," says Kaviani. A technician might need someone with expertise in financial modeling or someone who can raise funds. "Launching a company can be stressful and lonely." In the DC metro and Philadelphia markets, Kaviani counts close to 2,500 members both online and attending meetups. The company has just announced plans for a rollout in Boston, followed by New York City and Los Angeles, with pans for nationwide coverage.
 
Regarding revenue, Kaviani says CFL has plans to offer premium level access with advanced tools and capability. 

Source: Shahab Kaviani, CoFounders Lab
Writer: Sue Spolan

Crosstown tracking: The Philly Tech Week 2012 preview

Sure Old City is ground zero for the Philly tech scene, but Philly Tech Week 2012 organizer Christopher Wink has his eye on advancing technology citywide. Kicking off April 20 with Philly Startup Weekend, PTW 2012 is designed to reach a bigger audience with curated events organized by track. With over 60 items now on the calendar, and more to come, Wink says he wants PTW to reflect a broad, inclusive and impactful tech community.

"I have always been interested in digital access issues," says Wink, who is working with State Representative Rosita Youngblood on an event aimed at increasing computer literacy for seniors, as well as widening the circle to include neighborhood groups outside the city ring. Wink, who is also the co-founder of Technically Philly, is looking forward to the robotics expo, which aims to show middle and high school kids that technology can be both cool and practical.

The avalanche of events of last year's inaugural PTW, says Wink, was meant to rapidly raise awareness of the tech community. Feedback from 2011 led to curation of 2012 participants and creation of tracks for Entrepreneurship/Investment, Media/Transparency, Arts/Creative, Access/Policy and Design/Development. "Sixty to 70 events are too much to comprehend," says Wink. "The grouping of events makes it easier for Joe Entrepreneur." A close relative, by the way, to Joe Sixpack, organizer of Philly Beer Week and the inspiration for PTW.

That first weekend, beginning April 20, already packs a punch. In addition to Startup Weekend, which will take place at University of the Arts, the Women in Tech Summit meets all day Saturday, April 21, and on Sunday, April 22, Indy Hall sponsors a block party on North 3rd Street from 1 to 8 pm. You can also get a peek into how the Philadelphia Eagles choose draft picks, find out if your IP is leaking, and mingle with Switch Philly judges Josh Kopelman, Ellen Weber and Mayor Michael Nutter, who will choose one entrepreneur in the competition for a major prize package. The complete schedule can be found here.

Source: Christopher Wink, Philly Tech Week
Writer: Sue Spolan

Philly SEED finalists for education entrepreneurship grants announced

Forty-one applications have been whittled down to 12 finalists for the inaugural round of funding for Philly SEED, which aims to promote education entrepreneurs in the region.
 
Spearheaded by PhillyCORE Leaders, Councilman Bill Green and The Spruce Foundation, Philly SEED chose finalists in two categories -- expanding/established entrepreneurs and emerging entrepreneurs.
 
Finalists will present their ideas on Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the WHYY building (150 N. 6th St., Philadelphia). You can support the program by coming out -- $40 will get you food, drinks and inspiration. For $70, you'll also be able to sponsor a principal, teacher or parent to attend for free. Proceeds and donations go to the winner of the emerging entrepreneurs group.

Emerging Entrepreneurs
 
ApprenNet’s K12Meets is a scalable, low cost teaching training tool that leverages technology for countless teachers to practice skills, collaborate with each other, and receive meaningful expert feedback.    
 
I.O. promotes health, literacy, financial literacy, and community by offering access to nutrition and fitness; providing financial tools for growth and security; improving education and employment; and by developing leaders.
 
Lessonsmith is an online platform that helps teachers share and collaborate on resources to make their lessons more engaging and more effective.  
 
Philasoup is a monthly microgrant dinner that brings innovative and dynamic Philadelphia-area educators together, funds selected education-based projects, and highlights the great work educators are doing around the city.
 
Teacher Action Group incubates and facilitates Educator-led School Transformation by providing city-wide peer professional development programs that leverage social capital of schools and communities.
 
YES! for Schools provides at-risk students with practical tools to manage stress, resulting in increased academic performance, improved student behavior and healthier school communities.
 
Expanding/Established Entrepreneurs
 
Education-Plus Inc. is building high school-college partnerships that target low income students in which a high school student obtains his/her degree during the evening hours at his/her high school.  This model ensures access, affordability, and college accountability. 
 
Springboard Collaborative combines targeted student instruction with parent training in an incentivized system that closes the literacy gap.
 
Startup Corps empowers high school students to be active, engaged participants in their education by leveraging their passions and teaching them the skills necessary to start something real.
 
the school collective is an online professional development network, accessible by independent teachers, schools and organizations, that enhances school and teacher quality through the streamlining of planning procedures and sharing of best practices.
 
The Student Leadership Project develops a corps of influential students who are the primary builders of school culture. With students taking ownership of culture, teachers can focus on instruction.
 
Urban Blazers is a non-profit organization that provides young people from under-resourced Philadelphia communities with  regular leadership programs that are highlighted by outings which include hiking, rock climbing and more. 

Source: Rachel Meadows, City Councilman Bill Green's office
Writer: Joe Petrucci

University City-based PalmLing concierge translation service lauches Kickstarter campaign

You are in a foreign country. You don't speak the language. Something awful happens. "I was in China," says Ryan Frankel, co-founder of PalmLing, a startup out of University City aimed at providing real time concierge level translation assistance to travelers at a modest daily cost. "I thought I could eat anything on the menu, but the next morning I was in a world of pain. It was a serious situation. I don't speak Mandarin. I staggered to the pharmacy. At that point, I would have given anything to have someone there capable of communicating on my behalf."

That was the lightbulb moment for Frankel, who connected with business partner Kunal Sarda back at Wharton, where both were pursuing MBA degrees. "We are helping international travelers navigate the complexities of a language barrier," says Frankel. A PalmLing subscriber calls an access number 24 hours a day and gets connected real time with a live translator who can do the talking on the traveler's behalf to a pharmacist or taxi driver, for example.

PalmLing has just launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise $25,000, which will be used to create a PalmLing mobile app. Right now, all it takes to get connected to a translator is a standard mobile phone and an access code.

The human capital intensive business requires live translators to sign up. Travelers can book PalmLing for periods of 10, 20 or 60 days, at a variable cost of $1.50 to 4.00 per day, depending on the length of the package.

"We went from zero to 1,300 translators in the last month without any advertising," remarks Frankel, who counts stay at home moms, retirees and ex-military among the legion of live assistants who get paid anywhere from $15 to 25 an hour. "We offer PalmLing for Hindi, Mandarin, and all Spanish speaking countries," says Frankel, who estimates coverage of about 200 million trips annually with those three languages alone. Frankel adds that those 1,300 employees were acquired at nearly zero cost.

Frankel and Sarda are also seeking partnerships with businesses to acquire customers in three core stages of travel: before the trip on sites like Orbitz and TripAdvisor, en route at the airport or in the airline magazine, and at the destination, working with hotels, transportation providers and local mobile phone companies.

Source: Ryan Frankel, PalmLing
Writer: Sue Spolan

Learning the language of growth: Stroll in Center City hiring up to five every week

Who would think that a 33-minute online promotional video could be so effective? Stroll, the sole licensee for consumer sales of the audio language learning Pimsleur Approach and producer of the animated pitch, is growing at a phenomenal clip. "We grow in one month the way most companies grow in a year," says Dan Roitman, founder and CEO of Stroll. "We have over 150 employees and so far this year are hiring four to five a week. It's like mushrooms sprouting everywhere."

Roitman says he started the company while in college at the University of Maryland, going $70,000 in credit card debt. "I discovered the Pimsleur Approach in 2001 and thought it was such a great product, but so undermarketed," says Roitman. "I saw the opportunity with the product line to take it to another level."

Since 2002, Stroll has expanded at a compounded annual growth rate of 73%. Last year alone Stroll grew 135%.
Competing with Rosetta Stone, which holds the number one slot in the language learning vertical with the benefit of an $80 million dollar investment, Roitman saw that the path to success was all in the metrics. "At this point, we represent the majority of sales in the marketplace," says Roitman, whose sophisticated marketing analytics verge on fanatical. "When we spend $5,000 to place an ad, it's critical that we measure the return on every single ad dollar." Now in its 12th year of business, that 33 minute long landing page video is the result of a decade of rigorous testing.

Roitman had to fight for placement of his first online ad, which broke even. He improved and tweaked until one Pimsleur ad resulted in a 1,500% lift in the conversion rate. "We focused on one channel at a time, and then diversified within that channel."

Roitman says the company's marketing efforts have turned language learning into an impulse purchase. Most people who buy the Pimsleur Approach do not have a pressing need to know Spanish or Chinese, but rather have a latent desire to improve themselves, says Roitman. "We help them take steps to achieve a lifelong dream of learning that language. They open themselves up to a whole new world."

Source: Dan Roitman, Stroll
Writer: Sue Spolan

Transforming the law school experience with ApprenNet out of Drexel

Students graduating from law school may be well versed in the doctrine, but have no idea how to put together an angel funding package or negotiate a divorce. Drexel University law professor Karl Okamoto is changing the way law is taught through his startup ApprenNet.

Okamoto, a Professor of Law and Director of the Program in Business & Entrepreneurship Law at the Earle Mack School of Law at Drexel, has already rolled out his engaging and gamified instructional program to about 20 law schools nationwide, thanks to initial grants from the National Science Foundation totaling $180,000 so far, with a potential million-dollar grant on its way this summer. Okamoto is assisted by recent Drexel law grad Emily Foote and developer Paul Tzen.

ApprenNet, currently in beta, is an interactive website that augments and expands on the classroom experience by redefining legal education as an apprenticeship. A student watches a client pose a question on a legal topic, then posts a video answer, finally getting to see an expert answering the same question. Others can view student answers, and the budding attorney gets a portfolio of video responses which can be shared with potential employers.

By the end of this semester, Okamoto estimates that a quarter of U.S. law schools will be using ApprenNet. "Professors struggle over how to insert practical training," says Okamoto. ApprenNet is hands off. All the instructor has to do is send a student to the website. The startup grew out of Okamoto's LawMeets program.

"The whole system relies on practitioners' participation," says Okamoto, who has been most heartened by the discovery of a huge pent up demand to provide teaching and feedback among practitioners the world over. Usually, in a guest lecture, students are surfing or sleeping, and are not engaged. The way ApprenNet works, says Okamoto, it takes only 10 minutes to record an expert video, and students are eager to get feedback from the experts.

So far, Okamoto has not sought revenue outside of sponsors who are excited to be in front of law students, like Practical Law Company and Bloomberg. "We have not yet charged any user for the exercise, but have been collecting data on what people are willing to pay," says Okamoto, who is building in the ability to charge users a small monthly subscription fee.

There is also potential to create ApprenNet for many other disciplines, like training food service workers, teachers, or even musical training. "We'll take care of law first, says Okamoto, "and then use it in lots of different places. Why can't we crowdsource violin?"

Source: Karl Okamoto, ApprenNet
Writer: Sue Spolan

FundingWorks combines gamification, crowdfunding for local nonprofits

Three local leaders in their respective fields of startups, game technology and nonprofit arts and culture have joined forces to create a new crowdfunding model for Greater Philadelphia nonprofits called FundingWorks.

The powerhouse team includes co-founders Brad Oyler, Philly Startup Weekend and Seed Philly organizer and Chief Technophile of W3Portals Brad Oyler, and Philadelphia Game Lab Founder Nathan Solomon. CultureWorks Founder and Managing Director Thaddeus Squire was an integral part of the early stages and will serve formally as an advisor. Not surprisingly, the trio's "side project" came together quickly in the last several weeks, launching on Saturday with a pair of nonprofit organizations' projects listed on the site.

While sites like Kickstarter and IndieGoGo have jumpstarted crowdfunding for creatives across the country, their models are not well-suited for nonprofit projects and are not rooted in local support. Solomon says Philadelphia is the perfect place for a project such as FundingWorks, which aims to cull donor data and identify donor trends to gamify giving and polish a platform that for now, at least, is experimental.

"My perception is that we're the most active grassroots city in North America right now, because the cost of living is so manageable and the nature of the city – being distressed enough to have resources from the government but still in good enough shape where there's solid real estate and financials," Solomon says, noting the proliferation of new nonprofits in addition to shifting funding sources for well-established ones.

There is also a great need, as Squire well knows through his work with CultureWorks, which provides management services and strategic intervention with leading area nonprofit organizations and soon, coworking (Squire is in negotiations for a Center City space that could launch sometime this summer). He cites the finding in Portfolio, the Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance's barometer of the regional nonprofits arts and culture sector, that 50 percent of all nonprofits here operate at a deficit.

The hope is to fill that need by observing giving trends and experimenting with gamifying the platform, like the Gold, Silver and Bronze support levels listed on FundingWorks and its tracking of donor referrals. Do people give more when they get a badge or special status?

"We're interested in playing with some of these psychological dynamics that happen within the sphere of crowdfunding that get into more gamification-like applications, that go beyond the content being put out there.

"Everyone can have a nifty video and some good copywriting and nifty tchotchkes and benefits for donors. But what's beyond those things?"

The site launched with two projects – Create Buzz for The Swap, a clothing swap intended for students to hold at their school, and Send a Girl to TechGirlz Camp, a day camp to teach middle school girls about the intersection of business and technology. Your nonprofit group can apply here, and best of all, donations are tax deductible and 100 percent of gifts go to the project or organization.

Source: Nathan Solomon, Philadelphia Game Lab; Thaddeus Squire, CultureWorks
Writer: Joe Petrucci

Baiada Center expands to Baiada Institute, offers family wisdom at recent summit

The Laurence A. Baiada Center for Entrepreneurship announced today that it is expanding to become the Baiada Institute, a University-level institute within Drexel University. The Baiada Institute will pursue more seed capital, micro-grants, and Small Business Innovation Research grants. 

Previously, Baiada functioned within the LeBow College of Business. 

The parents of Mel, Mark, Mike and Matt Baiada must have been some kind of magic. The four siblings have found business success in very different fields. On March 8, the Baiada Center, named after the family patriarch, hosted The Brothers Baiada: 4 Faces of Entrepreneurship.
 
Mark Baiada founded Bayada Nurses, and has grown a home health care operation to more than 200 offices in 20 states. He was awarded Ernst & Young's Entrepreneur of the Year, which commended his tenet to think big, work hard, and show love.
 
Mike Baiada was one of Drexel's earliest students to receive dual business and engineering degrees. Mike's ATH Group fundamentally alters the air traffic control process, aiming to greatly increase timeliness and profitability. Mike, also a commercial airline pilot for United, says the secret to success is to determine process first, and then create minimal technology to make ideas a reality.
 
SolidSurface Designs is Matt Baiada's business. "When I was in grammar school, we had to walk two miles to get home. We would pass a lumber yard every day," recalls Matt. "There was a contractor there who had a whole lot of cash and was always peeling off bills. That was pretty impressive." Matt began by fixing up the Baiada family home, then founded a carpentry and cabinetmaking business that became SolidSurface, a 20,000 square foot manufacturing facility with 25 employees.
 
Mel, the youngest of the brothers, went into information technology. He sold his company Bluestone to Hewlett Packard in 2001 for over $350 million. His advice: passion is useless if there is no need for your product or service in the marketplace -- save your passion for long term sustainability. Mel is now managing partner at BaseCamp Ventures and President of Basecamp Business
 
The early morning event, part of the Eye of the Entrepreneur series, drew a crowd of about 150.

Today's announcement was made possible by a $500,000 donation from the Barbara and Charles Close Foundation, $250,00 from Mel and Mark Baiada and $200,00 from Dick Hayne of Urban Outfitters, also a Drexel trustee. A behavioral laboratory planned for the new 12-story LeBow College of Business facility will foster experiential learning in sales and negotiations.

Source: Matt Baiada, Mark Baiada, Mel Baiada, Mike Baiada, Baiada Center for Entrepreneurship
Writer: Sue Spolan
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