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Under Armour's Kevin Plank Awards
Second Annual Cupid's Cup
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Goozex
Inc., an award-winning,
peer-to-multi-peer video
game trading company, won
this year's Cupid's Cup. |
The second annual Cupid’s Cup
competition was held Friday, May 4,
2007, at the Robert H. Smith School of
Business in College Park, MD. The
Dingman Center for Entrepreneurship
hosted the business competition for
student- and alumni-run startups. Under
Armour Chief Executive Kevin Plank, a
1996 Smith graduate, put up $22,500 in
prize money and helped pick the winner
of this year’s competition — Goozex Inc.
(www.goozex.com),
an award-winning, peer-to-multi-peer
video game trading company headquartered
in College Park.
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“This competition was really
inspired by Kevin Plank’s
entrepreneurship,” said
Asher Epstein, managing
director of
the Dingman Center. |
“This competition was really inspired
by Kevin Plank’s entrepreneurship,” said
Asher Epstein, managing director of the
Dingman Center. “I looked around and
realized many other students have great
ideas and share Kevin’s passion and we
really want to foster that to help
outstanding ventures thrive.”
Goozex designed and developed an
innovative online system that connects
members and builds a user community
across North America, allowing them to
trade games with each other. Goozex
operates on a point-based system that
allows its users to retain the real
market value of their used video games
when trading for other games. The
company is run by Smith MBA 2006
graduate Valerio Zanini and features a
team of recent Smith MBA and
undergraduate students. Goozex took home
$15,000 for their innovation.
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Goozex is
run by Smith MBA 2006
graduate Valerio Zanini
and features a team of
recent Smith MBA and
undergraduate students. |
Goozex plans to use its share of the
prize money to expand the Web site’s
community features. Zanini hopes his
company will achieve continued growth
and hopefully see the kind of success
Kevin Plank has realized with his
company. He said he owes some of the
credit to the Dingman Center.
“I came to Maryland for my MBA
because of the Dingman Center, and it
was at Dingman that I met the Goozex
guys,” said Zanini, who came to Smith
from Italy. “The Dingman Center has
really been the cornerstone of my MBA
and my American experience.”
Cupid's Cup got its name from one of
Kevin Plank's early entrepreneurial
ventures, a rose sale business called
Cupid's Valentine that sold roses to
University of Maryland students on
Valentine's Day. This small business
earned him over $20,000 during his four
years at UM and helped fund his ultimate
entrepreneurial venture, Under Armour.
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Jordan
Lichman (center), MBA 2006,
accepted the second-place
check for $7,500 for
Sunscreen Mist, the
exclusive distributor of the
Sun Treatment Center.
Asher Epstein, left, Kevin
Plank, right. |
Eligible contestants must have been
enrolled in an undergraduate or graduate
program at the University of Maryland.
Alumni of the University of Maryland,
graduating with an undergraduate or
graduate degree between May 2002 and
December 2006 also were eligible for the
competition. All entrants must have had
an operating company that generated at
least $5,000 in revenue prior to the
date of entry. Companies that generated
more than $500,000 in revenue were not
eligible to compete in Cupid's Cup.
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The winners of the first
Cupid’s Cup competition
Dominic Crapuchettes
(right) and Satish
Pillalamarri, both 2004 MBA
graduates, gave an update on
North Star Games. |
The 2006 winners of the first Cupid’s
Cup competition,
North Star Games’ founders Dominic
Crapuchettes and Satish Pillalamarri,
both 2004 MBA graduates and former
Dingman Center scholars, shared the ups
and downs of their board game company in
the past year. They reported that the
$10,000 prize they won last year helped
keep their company on the path to
success – this year realized with their
game “Wits and Wagers” picked up by
major retailers Target and Barnes and
Noble.
Judges for this year’s competition
included Plank, executives from Under
Armour -- Matthew Mirchin, VP of North
American Sales; Jody Giles, Chief
Information Officer; and Alex Miyamoto,
director of investor relations -- along
with venture capitalists Dingman
Entrepreneur-in-Residence Tien Wong and
Matt Brock of CD Ventures.
The final round of the competition
included five finalist teams, narrowed
from a field of more than 20 applicants.
Each team had eight minutes to present
their business plans before judges and a
sizable crowd in Van Munching Hall’s
Frank Auditorium. Finalists included
Geocentric, Gill Grilling Company,
Sunscreen Mist, and Workscited4U.
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Geocentric is a specialty
software and services company
dedicated to improving Internet
mapping and local search by enabling
Destination Marketing Organizations,
such as business improvement
districts and tourism destinations,
to self-manage and self-publish
high-quality interactive maps and
location driven content within their
existing Web sites.
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Gill Grilling Company is the
long established preference for
fraternity and sorority meal service
at the University of Maryland. Gill
Grilling Company contracts with the
Greek organizations to provide lunch
and dinner every day, assuming the
responsibilities of hiring the
chefs, planning the menu and cooking
the food. They provide all the
benefits of private chefs with the
resources of a company specializing
in the industry.
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Sunscreen Mist is the exclusive
distributor of the Sun Treatment
Center. The company’s
state-of-the-art booth mists users
with FDA approved, Allevea™
sunscreens and suncare products. The
booth is easy for small children to
operate, accepts a variety of
payment options and requires no
attendant, no plumbing, and a
minimal amount of space around
pools, beaches, marinas, and water
parks.
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WorksCited4U can take
information from any source – an
encyclopedia, a book with multiple
authors, a historical document, a
sports documentary, or even a work
of music – and automatically process
the individual formats into a
bibliography, adhering to the MLA
style formatting.
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Kevin Plank turned down a
well-paying job in the
financial services industry
when he graduated from the
Smith School in 1996 to
follow his dream of
starting Under Armour. |
After the business plan
presentations, Plank spoke about
entrepreneurship and his business
endeavors, then presented an over-sized
$15,000 check and trophy cup to Goozex
and a $7,500 check to second-place
winner Sunscreen Mist.
“Spend wisely with that money,” Plank
joked before announcing the winners.
“I’m telling you, it’s a lot of money –
what I would have given for it when I
was in your situation.”
Plank turned down a well-paying job
in the financial services industry when
he graduated from the Smith School in
1996 to follow his dream of starting
Under Armour. He founded his athletic
apparel company in his grandmother’s
basement and has grown it into a
successful publicly traded company.
He said he keeps four rules for
building his company and encouraged the
entrepreneurs to do the same:
- Build a great product
- Tell a great story – communicate
the message of the company
- Service business – attract and
retain customers through good
service
- Build a great team – find people
with complimentary skills
Zanini said Plank’s ideals about
entrepreneurship and running a company
align very much with Goozex’s strategy –
especially Plank’s points about
servicing the customer and building a
good team. Goozex plans to continue to
work on both.
“We are five guys now, but we are
working like we are 15,” Zanini said.
Plank said events like Cupid’s Cup
really give young entrepreneurs the
edge, because there is increasing global
competition, which means “‘only is
America’ just is not true anymore,” he
said. “We need you to keep coming up
with great ideas and keep developing
those ideas,” Plank told the
entrepreneurs. Above all, he pushed
entrepreneurs to stay passionate, stay
positive and stay focused to achieve
success.
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Carrie Taschner, Susannah Campbell, Office of Marketing
Communications
Photos by Alissa Arford-Leyl
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