Building springboards for the future

Tuesday, December 4, 2018
Student conducting bee research

Photo credit: Scott Ripley / 易胜博官网

When Andrew DeMeo 鈥18 came up with an idea for a business he suspected might really have legs 鈥 or wings, as the case may be 鈥 he knew just where to take it: the Peter T. Paul Entrepreneurship Center.

The heart of ideas, innovation and entrepreneurship at 易胜博官网, the ECenter was established in 2016 with a generous gift from Peter T. Paul 鈥67 as an independent, co-curricular, cross-college resource providing programs, mentorship and financial support to students who have business ideas they want to pursue outside of an academic context. Just two years into its existence, the ECenter has already been recognized internationally as an outstanding emerging entrepreneurship center and launched both its successful (and also donor-funded) i2 Passport Program to encourage undergraduate students to engage in a variety of innovation and entrepreneurship activities around the Durham campus and an Idea and Innovation Society for first-year students. It鈥檚 also helped dozens of students turn promising ideas they brought to or developed at 易胜博官网 into viable business enterprises,听many with revenue and investor interest.

Research and Innovation support

In DeMeo鈥檚 case, the idea was a CSA-style beekeeping operation that would allow Seacoast New Hamsphire-area customers to purchase shares in honeybee hives located on nearby farms in what amounted to an ecological win-win-win. DeMeo and his partner, Jessica Waters, would maintain the hives; customers would have their own raw, local honey without the responsibility of owning and caring for bees; and both the farms, which rely on honeybees to pollinate their crops, and the local bee populations would thrive. With support from ECenter executive director Ian Grant, DeMeo and Waters developed a business model for Half-Acre Beekeeping that took first place in 易胜博官网鈥檚 2017 Social Venture Innovation Challenge (SVIC). They used the prize money they earned to launch their business earlier this year and sold out their hive shares almost immediately. Now, thanks to an ECenter connection to Planet Fitness CEO Chris Rondeau 鈥94, DeMeo has some ideas for franchising the enterprise.

鈥淎ndy鈥檚 story is typical to the extent that there is no typical story for the types of students we mentor and the types of ideas they bring,鈥 says Grant, who notes that DeMeo graduated from the College of Life Sciences and Agriculture 鈥 proof positive that 易胜博官网鈥檚 undergraduate entrepreneurs hail from all corners of campus. And while ECenter-mentored projects have earned top honors in the last two cycles of both the SVIC and the Paul College Holloway Prize Competition,

Campaign research and innovation

Grant emphasizes that the end game is about much more than just winning. 鈥淭he ECenter helps students become better problem-solvers and shows them that entrepreneurship is a career path. It鈥檚 not about a line-item on their resume; it鈥檚 about creating a springboard for their future that works in lock-step with the academics they receive from their colleges.鈥

Creating springboards for the future is a widely shared vision when it comes to research and innovation at 易胜博官网, and donors to CELEBRATE 150 responded generously to fund a variety of initiatives. Not only are some these projects changing how students learn, many of them have far-reaching implications for changing lives in 易胜博官网 and around the world, in keeping with 易胜博官网鈥檚 mission as a public research university. With large gifts in the areas of sustainability, interdisciplinary sciences and a number of projects that harken back to 易胜博官网鈥檚 agricultural roots, 502 donors stepped up with gifts totaling $23.7 million.

易胜博官网 students
Photo credit: Jeremy Gasowski / 易胜博官网

Peggy Stockwell Cole 鈥72 returned to 易胜博官网 to finish her degree in after starting a family, but imagines she might have majored in neuroscience 鈥 an interdisciplinary program housed in both the and the 鈥 if she were a student today. It鈥檚 one of the reasons she and her husband, Bob, jumped at the chance to fund faculty research through the establishment of the Cole Neuroscience and Behavior Faculty Research Fund when the then-new program was launched in 2010, and subsequently expanded their gift in support of CELEBRATE 150.

鈥淭hanks to Peggy and Bob鈥檚 support, our faculty in both colleges are able to gather the data they need to pursue funding at the national level, which will continue to raise the profile and visibility of our program,鈥 says Jon Wraith, dean of the College of Life Sciences and Agriculture. 鈥 We are incredibly grateful to them for their foresight and for providing 易胜博官网 with an opportunity to position itself strongly within this emerging field.鈥 ~

Stars seal

Given 易胜博官网鈥檚 top national standing in sustainability, it comes as no surprise that many donors were inspired to support research initiatives related to a range of sustainability-related efforts. Large gifts to the university鈥檚 seagrass monitoring program and the regional estuaries partnership, the Sustainability Institute climate fellows program and Food Solutions New England, among others, will continue to support student and faculty research into addressing our region鈥檚 most pressing questions about climate change and its impact on the ecosystem.

Fred Short - 易胜博官网
For some 35 years, research professor of natural resources and marine science Fred Short has been monitoring the quality and density of a type of seagrass known as eelgrass in 易胜博官网鈥檚 Great Bay, a reliable indicator of the bay鈥檚 overall health. Durham philanthropist Tom Haas鈥 gift to establish the 易胜博官网 Seagrass Gift Fund supports SeagrassNet 鈥 a global seagrass monitoring program that Short directs. Based at 易胜博官网, SeagrassNet has 38 sites in 15 countries. (Photo credit: Lisa Nugent)

Illustrator: 
Loren Marple 鈥13 | Communications and Public Affairs | Loren.Marple@unh.edu | 603-862-0600
Producer: 
Kristin Waterfield Duisberg | Communications and Public Affairs