Company
Founded by Smith School Undergraduate
Wins $15,000 in Business Plan
Competition
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Jason Volk, junior accounting major,
(left) and Sandeep Mehta were
awarded second place and $15,000. |
A start-up technology
company founded by Smith School
undergraduate has been awarded $15,000 in
the University of Maryland's Third Annual
Business Plan Competition. AlertUS
Technologies, co-founded by junior
accounting major Jason Volk, took second
place in the May 9th competition, during
which Volk and co-founder Sandeep Mehta went
before a panel of judges that included top
venture capitalists and angel investors.
It is a tremendous honor for AlertUS
Technologies to receive the business plan
competitions second place award, and
recognition by the eminent panel of judges,
said Volk, who participates in the
university's
Hinman Campus Entrepreneurship Opportunities
(CEOs) program. Our team will put the
award money to good use as we proceed with
manufacturing the components of our early
warning solution.
AlertUS Technologies is developing a secure
wireless communications system for emergency
warning information. The system is designed
for closed communities such as universities,
large corporations, and government campuses.
It can disseminate detailed information -
such as the nature of an emergency and what
actions people should take in response - to
large populations within seconds.
AlertUS was one of six technology start-ups,
all founded at the university, to share in
the competitions $50,000 in prize money. All
of the winning companies, comprised of
students, faculty, and recent alumni, focus
on new or next-generation technologies in
areas such as homeland security, high-tech
manufacturing, and recreational vehicles.
Winning this competition will help us
realize our entrepreneurial dream, said
mechanical engineering student Alok
Priyadarshi, a member of first-place company
Terplicators Inc. Being recognized by such a
distinguished panel of judges validates our
business plan and gives us confidence to
move forward. Our credibility will also be
higher as we seek additional funding.
Terplicators, which netted $20,000 by
winning the competition, is developing
next-generation mold design software
solutions. The company's software modules
take Computer Aided Design (CAD) or scanned
data and produce accurate mold designs
within minutes. More than a third of the 30
potential customers contacted by
Terplicators have already expressed interest
in its product, including Black & Decker,
Direct Dimensions, Space Limited, and
NAVSEA.
Third-place-winner Castle Duncan Inc. won
$7,500. The company has developed a
prototype of its ultra-safe all-terrain
vehicle, which is designed to cut down on
ATV-related injuries and deaths with a
custom roll-cage and four-point safety
harness. Castle Duncan's team includes
undergraduate student Adam Herbert and
alumnus Richard Duncan, both from the
Department of Mechanical Engineering. The
three remaining teams each won $2,500.
The competition was judged by Jonathan
Aberman, partner at Fenwick & West LLP; Rob
Cerbone, associate at Telecommunications
Development Fund; Wayne Lee, partner, at
Reed Smith LLP; John May, managing partner
at New Vantage Group; and Erik Org, senior
associate at Techno Venture Management.
Sponsors of the competition included Mohr,
Davidow Ventures, Fenwick & West, Techno
Venture Management, Telecommunications
Development Fund, and Reed Smith LLP.
The Hinman CEOs Program, a living-learning
entrepreneurship program at the University,
managed the competition. The Hinman program
is a joint initiative of the university's
Robert H. Smith School of Business and the
A. James Clark School of Engineering.
Read more about Jason Volk and the
competition in
The Sun.