Business Plan Pitches

| | Comments (2) | TrackBacks (0)

We held our annual Belmont University Center for Entrepreneurship Business Plan Competition today.  Our top student entrepreneurs made their pitches for a total of $8,000 in prize money to help support their entrepreneurial aspirations. 

 

John Price and Sam Dryden shared their business, Lifetime Reel, which produces family documentaries.  The idea came from a project John produced about his grandfather.  John completed the documentary shortly before his grandfather passed away.  John and Sam are both Entrepreneurship majors.

 

Chris Dorsey, a Music Business major, presented a social venture that he is a part of called the Umkulo Project, which came out of a service learning project he and others were involved in during a study abroad in South Africa.  The Umkulo Project seeks alleviate the affects of poverty by providing the opportunity for African children to experience the hope that music education can bring.

 

Dale Clay, also a Music Business major, is founder of Red Winter Productions.  His business composes custom wedding music, film scores, and music for advertising.

 

Cassie Schreiner is a double major in Graphic Design and Entrepreneurship.  Her business, CNS Photographic Design, took second place in last year's competition.

 

Hannah Miller is a classic academic overachiever, double majoring in Business and Spanish, with a minor in Theater.  Her presentation was on The Everlasting Tea Party.  Hannah's business offers a Tea Party in a box for little girls to enjoy the creative play that she enjoyed as a little girl hosting her own tea parties.

 

Noah Curran is majoring in International Business with a concentration in Entrepreneurship.  Noah is building a social venture called Real-8 that will bring Christian entertainment, including music, theatrical productions, and motivational speaking to churches across the country.

 

And the winners are....

 

3rd place and $1,000:  Cassie Schreiner

2nd place and $2,000:  Hannah Miller

1st place and $5,000:  John Price and Sam Dryden

 

 

 

2009 Business Plan Competition for website 2.jpg

 

Here is what one of our judges had to say about the competitors this year:

 

"It is such an amazing luxury for entrepreneurial creativity to be fostered in an academic environment like that of Belmont.  I am consistently impressed with the depth of knowledge their students have when they graduate regarding the direct applicability of classroom studying to 'real world' doing.  Belmont professors are also entrepreneurs so they respond quickly to an ever-changing business environment, which gives their students a clear competitive advantage with regard to everything from concise and effective communication (or pitching) to price points and economics.  I wish I had the opportunity when I was in college to learn about being an entrepreneur."

 

Kind Regards,                                         

 

Rachael D. Qualls

Founder and CEO

Angel Capital Network

 

Congratulations to all of the finalists!

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Business Plan Pitches.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.drjeffcornwall.com/cgi-bin/mt4/mt-tb.cgi/1870

2 Comments

Jeff,

Perfect timing! I am in the midst of designing a competition for our incubator. Our focus will be broadly technological, and I am in the midst of thinking through submission and judging guidelines.

I have two questions for you:

1) Are the details of your process posted anywhere? I've been doing some searching on business plan/concept competitions to get some ideas on how to run our.

2) Any pointers on how to raise the prize money? We have good relationships with service providers throughout our region, so "in kind" prizes will not be a problem. Money is always a different story. If you have any pointers they would be appreciated.

Thanks in advance. Congratulations on what looks like a great event.

I am happy to share our criteria and process. Just e-mail me at cornwallj@mail.belmont.edu. Prize money has become a real challenge for these events. Typically banks, law firms and other service providers love to sponsor these events. Most of these are obvioulsy not stepping up like they used to. Ours were sponsored by donors to our program this year. Others in our city are scrambling to find sponsors with very little success.

Leave a comment

 

Blog header by John Price @ johnpricephoto.com

2008 Top 25 Best Undergrad Schools for Entrepreneurs

Get RSS Feed

Powered by Movable Type 4.34-en

Blog Categories

Blog Categories

Archives

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Jeff Cornwall published on March 20, 2009 11:43 AM.

NFIB Releases Study on Outcomes of Healthcare Policy Alternatives was the previous entry in this blog.

A Good Day for Lifetime Reel is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Facebook

Facebook

Blog Directory

Business Directory for Nashville, Tennessee