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Microgrant Recipients

The Wond’ry is proud to support student ventures through our robust Entrepreneurship programs and through providing microgrant funding to their startups.  Here are just a few of the awesome projects the Wond’ry has helped to sponsor!

Phuture Doctors

Stephanie Castillo

Phuture DoctorsVanderbilt PhD student Stephanie Castillo’s media company Phuture Doctors is committed to diversifying representation in the STEM workforce and academia. She is changing the perception of who can be a scientist through engaging media content.

  • Won the Entrepreneur Organization’s Pitch Competition and traveled to San Francisco to compete in the finals
  • Won 1st Place in the Science in Video Competition from the Materials Research Society First generation American and first in her family to graduate college
  • One of 17 people selected for a Science Filmmaking Workshop out of 700 that applied
  • Designed her own PhD program in Science Communication
  • Before starting Phuture Doctors, she found 391 STEM Channels on YouTube, but only 32 with female hosts and 0 hosted by a Person of Color

Phuture Doctors Website

 

Zeno Power Systems

Tyler Bernstein and Jonathan Segal are developing a next-generation radioisotope power system that converts the heat from recycled nuclear waste into electricity. Their novel fuel and shielding design results in a system that is lightweight, cost-effective, and provides always-on, resilient power for years at a time.

  • Wond’ry’s first team of undergraduate students to be accepted into the prestigious National Science Foundation’s National I-Corps program. This program provided the students with $50K in non-dilutive funding to conduct extensive customer discovery work.
  • Won two contracts from the U.S. government to develop systems for use in space and undersea environments
  • Raised over $22M in private capital from venture capital firms such as Tribe Capital, 1517 Fund, and DCVC
  • Represented Vanderbilt in Washington, D.C. at the AAU/APLU Innovation Showcase
  • Tyler and Jonathan were recognized as members of the Forbes 30 under 30 class of 2020

Zeno Power Systems Website

 

 

PredictionHealth

PredictionHealth wins 1st place at 36|86 Festival 2018
PredictionHealth wins 1st place at 36|86 Festival 2018: Pedro Teixeira (second from right) and Ravi Atreya (far right)

PredictionHealthWhen Pedro Teixeira and Ravi Atreya first visited the Wond’ry, they had decided to put medical school on hold for a year to build a company, Prediction Health. Their AI-assisted scribe technology listens in during doctor-patient interactions and generates comprehensive, structured documentation in real-time. This documentation integrates with EMR systems and saves doctors hours each day.

  • Won the 36|86 Student Pitch Competition and took home $25K
  • First company in Nashville to be funded by Mucker Labs
  • Won 1st place in the Vanderbilt Entrepreneurship Conference’s Pitch Competition
  • Currently serving physicians across the U.S.
  • Pedro was invited to speak on entrepreneurship at the 2020 Southeastern Entrepreneurship Conference
  • Received a $50K grant from the National Science Foundation

PredictionHealth Website

 

Leaf

Leaf
Nat Robinson (left) and Tori Samples (right)

LeafLeaf Global Fintech uses blockchain technology and a lowtech front end to create a suite of mobile financial services for refugees and internally displaced persons.

  • Won Best Bootstrapped Startup at SXSW
  • Accepted into Techstars
  • Received an SBIR Grant from the National Science Foundation
  • Was invited to pitch at the Vatican in response to a call the Pope issued for solutions to the refugee crisis–The Laudato si’ Challenge
  • Recipient of the World Summit Awards Young Innovator Award
  • Tori moved to Rwanda last year to run the company full-time
  • Leaf currently employs 8 people and is operating in 5 countries in Africa

Leaf Website

 

Innerworld

Noah Robinson

Vanderbilt student Noah Robinson’s company, Very Real Help, is designing a novel approach to addiction treatment using virtual reality. He is currently running a study at Journey Pure, an in-patient drug rehabilitation center, to measure how virtual reality can change emotion and he hopes to expand this intervention to treat several types of mental health disorders.

  • One of the Wond’ry’s 1st teams to receive $50K from the National Science Foundation
  • Has been featured in the Tennessean, USA Today, and other news articles
  • Talks openly about how gaming was his escape from anxiety when he realized he was gay during his teenage years and this led to the idea for Very Real Help
  • Research Fellow for the National Institutes of Health Is actively testing his treatment platform and has received offers to license it

Very Real Help Website

 

Shades

Brionna Davis
Brionna Davis

ShadesVanderbilt Computer Science undergraduate Brionna Davis is putting her gifts to work solving the challenge Black and Brown people face when trying to choose makeup shades that match their skin tone. Using cutting-edge developments in AR technology, Brionna is working to build a consumer-facing solution called Shades that would be utilized by cosmetic companies on their e-commerce websites.

  • Recent Spring 2020 PostLaunch program graduate and microgrant winner
  • Is applying to the National Science Foundation’s I-Corps program
  • Top Ten Finalist in the Peter Farrell Cup, an idea pitch competition
  • Spent a summer conducting research in Bavaria, where she was first author on a paper about traffic flow patterns that was featured in a presentation by the Transportation Research Board

 

ARMS Cyber

ARMS Cyber
Brad & Tim Potteiger win 1st place at the Southeastern Entrepreneurship Conference

ARMS CyberTwin brothers Brad and Tim Potteiger are building a revolutionary cybersecurity company, Arms Cyber. Their extensive backgrounds with the CIA, NSA, NASA, and White House have positioned them as leaders in cyber defense and their novel solution provides proactive protection strategies to prevent cyber attacks utilizing a moving target defense approach.

  • Have met 5 US Presidents
  • Won 1st Place in the 2020 Southeastern Entrepreneurship Conference’s Student Pitch Competition and the 36|86 Pitch Competition
  • Have prevented large scale cyber attacks
  • Have developed sophisticated offensive cyber capabilities
  • Won the Owen Sohr Grant
  • Accepted to the Catalyst Space Accelerator
  • Won the JP Morgan Chase Vets in Tech Pitch Competition
  • Awarded a Phase II SBIRFinalist for USAA DC Pitch Competition

ARMS Cyber Website

 

TuneHatch

Christal Hector
Christal Hector

“Vanderbilt Double Dore (BA’19, MBA’23) Christal Hector developed the idea for her startup, TuneHatch, during her senior year while participating in Wond’ry programming. TuneHatch is a web based platform that uses predictive analytics to help independent venues and music artists book more profitable shows and help fans find the shows they’ll love. TuneHatch originally launched in NYC, pivoting to virtual music experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic, and restarted in-person operations upon Christal’s return to Nashville in 2021.

With its new and improved private beta launched, TuneHatch currently works with venues and artists around Nashville, with the intent to raise seed funding in the near future.”

  • Completed Wond’ry programming in spring of 2019 and hosted the first TuneHatch concert in Times Square in summer of 2019
  • Competed in the semi-finals of the Southeastern Entrepreneurship Conference’s Student Pitch Competition
  • Won the Owen Firestarter Pitch Competition
  • Alum of the prestigious Rice Business Plan Competition
  • She is a second-generation Jamaican American and self-described “unconfined mind,” lyricist, and producer

TuneHatch Website

 

Ready Dress Go

Jessica Kaplan and Zoe Antell

Vanderbilt undergraduates Jessica Kaplan and Zoe Antell founded Ready Dress Go in 2020. Ready Dress Go is an e-retail platform that helps young, aspiring, college women to feel confident in the workplace by reducing costs and increasing accessibility of professional attire.

  • Invited to present at the Entrepreneur Organization’s Student Pitch Competition
  • Received microgrant funding from the Wond’ry
  • Planning to release a capsule collection and begin a college ambassador program
  • Have been described as an “unstoppable duo”
  • Early focus groups have yielded positive responses to the proposed collection and price point

 

 

Synchro Motion

Harrison Bartlett
Harrison Bartlett

Synchro MotionHarrison Bartlett is a PhD student studying at the Vanderbilt Center for Intelligent Mechatronics whose passion is building assistive devices for individuals with physical impairments. His company, Synchro Motion, designs multi-functional prostheses that address the health and mobility challenges of the amputee population. The semi-powered ankle joint featured above fills a gap in the market between modulated passive devices and fully powered devices in terms of both functionality and size/weight.

  • Awarded a Wond’ry microgrant
  • The Wond’ry’s first team to be accepted into the National Science Foundation’s I-Corps program and receive a $50,000 grant
  • Since completing the I-Corps program, Harrison has received over $1.7M in additional grant funding from the National Science Foundation
  • Was featured in a video from NSF – “Four Awesome Discoveries You Probably Didn’t Hear About”, episode 8
  • Won 2nd place in the 36|86 Student Pitch Competition, taking home a $20,000 prize
  • Holds 5 patents

Synchro Motion Website

VitaSleeve

Jonathan Wynn

 

Jonathan Wynn has developed, Vitasleeve, an athletic compression sleeve, stitched with a vascular design, made of sticky, grip material for football players to wear.

  • Former Vanderbilt Football player (’17), who went on to have a productive career in the National Football League.
  • Author of a book titled, Summer Juice

Jonathan’s LinkedIn

Mighty Blendz

 

Kayla Vines

Vanderbilt undergraduate Kayla Vine began building Mighty Blendz during her Junior year at Vanderbilt. Frustrated by the lack of healthy meal replacements on the market to fuel her busy days, she embarked on extensive customer discovery and prototype testing of the first edition of Mighty Blendz. Mighty Blendz are blender-free smoothies for active people on the go complete with leafy greens, collagen protein, prebiotic fiber, and healthy fats. As she graduates in May 2022, Kayla will continue growing Mighty Blendz in Nashville.

  • Graduate & micro grant recipient of the Wond’ry’s builder program
  • Launched in October 2021 selling D2C from the Mighty Blendz website
  • Featured in Nashville Business Journal’s Inno Under 25
  • Graduate & microgrant recipient of Georgia Tech’s female founders VentureLab

Mighty Blendz Website

 

 

 

 

 

ESG Impact

Max Mona and Adam Jace

Adam Jace & Max Mona (Vanderbilt MSF ’22) have built ESG Impact, a SaaS web application that helps companies and funds assess, educate, and integrate themselves with ESG best practices– both generally and as seen in their sector. We work with private equity and venture capital funds as well as their portfolio companies to track their ESG performance and produce deliverables that can be communicated to stakeholders.

  • Won the SEC Pitch Competition on April 4th representing Vanderbilt University.
  • Significantly oversubscribed our Pre-Seed Funding Round led by GoAhead Ventures and have begun working in the Vanderbilt Launch Incubator Space.

ESG Impact Website

 

G-Pump

 

Danielle Klafter, Romario Lobban, and Jake Gordon

 

The GPump is the hands free hypoglycemia management system for individuals with GSD and Diabetes. The team behind the invention consists of Jake Gordon (Founder and CEO), Danielle Klafter (CTO/Head of Product), and Romario Lobban (COO).

  • Received two microgrants
  • Done several proof-of-concept experiments and currently working on a fully-functioning prototype.
  • Called a “fantastic invention” and desperately needed from an under-treated and recognized community.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Eupalinos Innovations

Karrie Dudek (left) Ethan Lippmann (right)

 

Postdoctoral fellow Dr. Karrie Dudek, PhD and Co-founder, and Vanderbilt faculty member, Dr. Ethan Lippmann, PhD are launching a medical device company, Eupalinos Innovations. Developed by Dr. Lippmann, their novel hydrogel technology promotes the rapid growth of large blood vessels that form robust vascular networks capable of restoring blood flow to ischemic tissues. This technology serves as a minimally invasive solution to improve patient outcomes and revolutionize the standard of care for select patient populations.

  • Karrie is the inaugural postdoctoral fellow in Vanderbilt’s ASPIRE to Innovate Program
  • 2021 Zero-to-510 Pre-accelerator Program participant
  • Completed the Wond’ry entrepreneurship programming and received microgrant funding 
  • First place winner of the 2022 Renaissance Women’s Summit Pitch Competition
  • Accepted into the National Science Foundation’s I-Corps Program and received $50k in non-dilutive funding

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DashQuill

Timothy Kozlov (left) Niranjan Sahi (right)

 

 

Vanderbilt Computer Science undergrad Niranjan Sahi and Timothy Kozlov are developing a new platform to streamline and remove friction for small practices in the medical and dental industry. Their startup remedies the everyday inefficiencies in the healthcare process, improving accuracy and operational efficiency for the practice.

  • Accepted into Microsoft’s Startup Founder Program
  • Winners of University of Washington CoMotion NSF ICorps Grant
  • Awarded Vanderbilt Wond’ry Microgrant
  • Processed over 2,500 patient sign ups across all offices

DashQuill Website