Smith School Students Place Second
in
National Venture Capital Competition
A team of five talented Smith School
MBA students won second place at the
fourth annual Venture Capital Investment
Competition (VCIC ). The competition was
held at the Kenan-Flagler Business
School, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill (March 29-31, 2001).
Smith School team members Allison
Helminski, Roy Schwartz, Matthew
Hamilton, Jeff Kummer and Doug White
(l to r) with Jonathan Perl (judge
and partner, Intersouth Partners, far
right) received $5,000 for their second
place win. Yale University received a
check for $10,000 for first place and
Washington University in St. Louis came
in third, winning $3,000.
"The core of the team was three
second year students who participated in
the local Smith School competition and
regionals last year. This was
supplemented by two first year students
to form this years team," said Doug
White. "The internal competition was
very useful, not only for overall
practice, but essential for the new team
members so they were in position to add
immediate value in the regional."
The VCIC competition gives MBA
students a realistic venture capital
experience by matching up teams with
real start-up companies. During the
competition, teams listened to company
presentations, interviewed executives
and performed additional due diligence.
Analysis, including a term sheet for
recommended investments, was then
presented to a panel of eight judges
from venture capital firms around the
country.
"Key elements venture capitalists
evaluate in business plans are the
market, the management, and the idea
(the technology in most cases)," said
Smith School team member Jeff Kummer.
"In evaluating these elements of each
business, class work in strategy and
marketing were the most useful, as were
some of the technology courses."
Eight schools made it to the finals
by placing first or second in their
regional competition: University of
Maryland, Washington University in St.
Louis, University of Michigan, Yale
University, University of Pennsylvania,
San Diego State University, UCLA and UNC
- Chapel Hill.
Prior to advancing to the elite
eight, each team had to participate in
campus and regional competitions - eight
teams participating at each level. At
the southeast regional competition held
in Atlanta, the Smith School placed
second behind UNC - Chapel Hill, winning
$2,000. Other schools in the southeast
region were Duke, Emory, UT Austin,
Georgia Tech, University of Georgia and
Wake Forest.
The Smith School's Dingman Center for
Entrepreneurship and the
Entrepreneurship Club both played key
roles in preparing students for the
competition. "The extremely close
involvement of the Dingman Center with
the local venture capital and
entrepreneurial community gave us a
distinct advantage over students from
other schools," said team member Matthew
Hamilton. "Training involved multiple
half-day seminars where venture
capitalists from the region came in and
presented training on the venture
industry, valuation, term sheets and due
diligence."
The best part of the competition for
White was, working in a fast-paced
challenging format that required
integration of the entire curriculum,
but also going beyond that to synthesis
and creativity. We had great fun, a
reflection of the inherent nature of the
format, but also the maturity and good
humor of all team members.
The VCIC's national sponsors include
Accenture, the National Venture Capital
Association, Intersouth Partners, Wilson
Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati and the
Kauffman Center for Entrepreneurial
Leadership. The Council for
Entrepreneurial Development, Southeast
Interactive Technology Funds, and
several other venture and
venture-related firms also sponsored the
VCIC.
Congratulations Smith School Team!