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E2SI Wraps Up Successful鈥擜lbeit, Virtual鈥擲ummer Program

E2SI 2020

When Dr. Lauri Olivier joined 澳门二分彩 as director of the Engineering Entrepreneurship program in January 2020, she never could have anticipated how short-lived her time on campus would be. Just as she was ironing out the details of her family鈥檚 move from Florida to the Philadelphia suburbs, the COVID-19 pandemic hit. When she returned home in March, she didn鈥檛 know that she wouldn鈥檛 be returning for the Engineering Entrepreneurship Summer Institute (E2SI), which was to begin in late May, or that the program would need to quickly be adapted to a virtual learning environment for its 23 students. She says, 鈥淲e tried to make this the best possible experience for them, and I think it went very, very well.鈥

E2SI recently came to a close with the students鈥 much-anticipated final presentations to a Zoom room of entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and College of Engineering leadership and faculty who served as judges. Dr. Olivier kicked off the event by highlighting all that the students had learned during the seven-and-a-half-week program, from design thinking, creativity and innovation frameworks to customer personas, user experience analysis and market segmentation. They were challenged to establish value propositions, business models and branding, and to file patents and develop venture pitches. 鈥淚t was based on Bill Aulet鈥檚 Disciplined Entrepreneurship, a rigorous 24-step process created at MIT,鈥 explains Dr. Olivier. In addition to E2SI鈥檚 five faculty members鈥擠r. Olivier; Assistant Director of Engineering Entrepreneurship Richard Stumpf; Multidisciplinary Design Lab Director George Simmons; Sustainable Engineering Professor of Practice Dr. Ross Lee; and adjunct Sarah Lucas, CCO of New World Angels, an angel investment company鈥攕tudents learned from nine technical experts across a variety of disciplines, 11 venture mentors and seven business development guest lecturers.

Francesca Stadtman, a rising junior Chemical Engineering major, found the variety of guest speakers to be very beneficial, 鈥淚t helped me better understand how the principles of entrepreneurship can be applied to a wide variety of careers.鈥 Chiachen Terry Yuan 鈥23 CpE adds, 鈥淭he program gives you a taste of product development with a pool of professors and industry professionals with experiences in entrepreneurship or working with new technologies.鈥

The 2020 E2SI cohort included representation from the College of Engineering, Villanova School of Business and College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, as well as one student from the University of Pennsylvania. They formed six interdisciplinary teams, bringing their individual skillsets and knowledge to the table. This diversity was evident in the unique products and services presented.

While each team was provided with the judges鈥 feedback and scoring, Dr. Lee notes that the program chose not to turn the presentations into a competition. 鈥淔rom our perspective they were all great and all winners!鈥 He also pointed out that this was the fourth straight Engineering Entrepreneurship minor cohort in which 100% of the teams filed provisional patents with the assistance of Villanova alumnus and patent attorney Jay Halt 鈥87 EE.

Engineering Entrepreneurship Advisory Board member Bernard Borghei 鈥94 EE, executive vice president of operations and co-founder of Vertical Bridge, shared his experience and expertise throughout the program and served as a judge at the final presentations. He describes the students as, 鈥渟mart, motivated, and unbounded by the negativities that one eventually faces in the real business world when it comes to taking an idea and make it into a real product.鈥

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