SolBridge News
2017 SolBridge Startup Business Plan Competition
Last week, SolBridge International School of Business held
the first Startup Business Plan Competition organized by SolBridge
Entrepreneurship Center and SolBridge Startup Club. A total of six teams
presented their Business Plans and mobile prototypes to a panel of judges, fellow
students and faculty. The judges who are investment professionals from leading
renowned accelerators in Korea and Asia included Heeyoon Lee, Senior Associate
at Sparks Labs, Junghoon Lee, Senior Manager at Primer, and Simon Shin, Senior
Principal at Bluepoints Partners.
After open voting by the attendants (faculty and
students) and the deliberations by the judges, the three winning teams were
selected based on the growth potential of their business, profitability/
business model’s logic and the team’s attitude and passion for making their
business happen.
‘HelpSick’ a medical app for foreigners in Korea won
the first prize and a KRW 2,000,000 award as seed money. This app translates symptoms/prescriptions
in one page before meeting a doctor/pharmacist and recommends a hospital based
on the symptoms. ‘GrabMe’ came second with KRW 1,300,000 seed money. GrabMe is a
P2P platform that connects travelers and online shoppers to get international
deliveries with high-level speed and trust. Lastly, ‘Hello Neighbor’
application to help people struggling with several problems in their homes
related to household chores, Information Technology, education, petcare, among
others was awarded the third prize and KRW 800,000.
This was a unique competition as the teams did not
only have to present PowerPoint presentations but also had to learn how to use
the Protopie (prototyping as an easy pie), a code free software used for making
mobile app prototypes. Prior to the competition, participating teams underwent
a series of workshops and mentoring sessions that provided educational contents
such as business plan writing sessions, Protopie workshop,
Entrepreneurs-In-Residence, pitching seminars among others. Students also got
an opportunity to meet different professionals in the startup field for
individual mentoring sessions on their work-in-progress business plans. In
addition to the experts, SolBridge professors also provided special help in the
“Open Office Hour” sessions.
An additional three teams were selected to participate
in the Asian Students’ Venture Forum (ASVF) finals in March 2018. ASVF is
Korea’s most significant international contest for sharing business start-up
items. It is held by Korea Economic Daily and sponsored by the Ministry of
Trade, Industry and Energy, the Korea Institute of Startup and Entrepreneurship
Development and KT&G.
At the end of the presentation, the judges held a
panel discussion on entrepreneurship and startups. “We got the 2nd prize in this competition,
but the best prize was meeting real accelerator representatives, investors, and
entrepreneurs who shared their ideas and expertise for future entrepreneurs
like me. It’s a valuable experience for my future entrepreneurial plans”
Diyorbek, said a member of the GrabMe team.