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March 1, 2002

Monocle Technologies 'eyeballs' $30,000 entrepreneurial prize

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – If the winners of Purdue University's 15th annual Burton D. Morgan Entrepreneurial Competition have their way, their laser-based spectroscopy technology will test every pill doctors prescribe to their patients.

Monocle Technologies, a team of Purdue chemistry students and two Krannert School MBA candidates, talked their way to the competition's $30,000 top prize in start-up money. Thursday's (2/28) event was judged by a panel made up of nine venture capitalists.

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"Our product works like an eyeball to analyze the chemical makeup of pharmaceuticals as they come down the assembly line," said team member and MBA candidate Dan Carney of Lafayette, Ind. "Winning the competition gives us the ability to talk to potential investors. Ultimately, our vision is to make Monocle Technologies a long-term business success."

Other members of the Monocle Technologies team, all from Lafayette, are George Laurence, a 2000 Purdue chemistry graduate; Larry Riggs, chemistry doctoral candidate; and Mark Sepeta, a Krannert School MBA candidate.

Shailendra Mehta, director of the Krannert School Entrepreneurship Initiative, said the total prize money has gone up from $54,000 last year to $85,000, making the event the largest university-sponsored student entrepreneurism competition award in existence.

Team Kintan's, a franchise-based medical practice business service, won $12,000 for its overall third-place finish plus $5,000 for being named the top undergraduate team. Team members are Navin Barot, Kintan Brahmbhatt of Munster, Ind., and Gabriel Chaddock of Portage, Ind.

A new event in this year's competition was the "elevator pitch," one-minute presentations of business plans followed by one minute to answer judges' questions. The Secure Brains team took the top elevator-pitch prize of $3,000 for its security device for wireless phones. Members of Secure Brains, winners of the elevator pitch, are Rajat Bhatt of the United Arab Emirates, Priyank Desai of Valparaiso, Ind., and Manan Relia of India.

"The Burton D. Morgan Entrepreneurial Competition offers the serious startup funding it takes to turn ideas into products or services," Mehta said. "You might have the greatest gadget in the world, but if no one will buy it, you are out of luck."

In addition to the prize money, the top projects get reduced-price office space in the Purdue Research Park and access to consultants and other resources to help get the fledgling enterprises off the ground. The contestants have been working on their products, proposals and marketing plans since the beginning of fall semester.

All Purdue students can participate in the event. Non-students – such as students from other colleges, Purdue alumni, faculty and local residents – also can be team members, but Purdue students must make the final presentations to the judges.

Mehta said 150 students prepared 54 business plans for this year's competition.

While the finalist teams were to have had 20 minutes to present their plans and 15 minutes to respond to the judges' questions, the venture capitalist judges peppered the contestants with questions almost from the get-go.

Carney said the difference for his winning team of Monocle Technologies was "our ability to answer the questions the judges asked."

Earning second place overall in the competition and winning $15,000 was the Matrix NMR team, whose plan was to provide nuclear magnetic resonance probes to analyze substances chemically. Mid IR Sensors, a medical device company, took fourth place and $10,000. Fifth place Zion, a company offering fast Internet access even at peak-usage times, won $7,000.

Judges were John Aplin, co-managing general partner of CID Equity Partners in Indianapolis; Jim Anderson, founding partner of Foundation Capital and Legacy Ventures in Palo Alto, Calif.; Don N. Aquilano, managing director of Gazelle TechVentures in Indianapolis; Joseph E. DeGroff, partner in Ice Miller Donadio & Ryan and founding partner of the law firm's Strategic Advisors Group in Indianapolis; David Geliebter, founder of Carrot Capital in New York; Tim Hiatt, managing director of Centerfield Capital Partners L.P. in Indianapolis; Tim Schiegel, director of Blue Chip Venture Co. in Cincinnati; Teri Willey, partner in ARCH Development Partners in Chicago; Robert Zieserl, managing partner of KB Partners in Northbrook, Ill.

At the awards ceremony, Hiatt said he and his fellow judges ranked the team business plan presentations on the basis of "the comprehensiveness of the plans, the startup management team in place, the size of the potential market and the plan the teams had made to enter the market."

The Burton D. Morgan Entrepreneurial Competition is one of components of the Center for Entrepreneurship that will be located at Purdue's recently announced $100 million Discovery Park. In addition to the entrepreneurship competition, the center will house the Innovation Realization Laboratory, Engineering Projects in Community Service and the Technology Transfer Initiative.

Richard A. Cosier, Krannert School dean and Leeds Professor of Management, said, "With the Burton Morgan competition and other initiatives at the Center for Entrepreneurship, we are nurturing an entrepreneurial culture at Purdue not only for our students but also for our professors."

The competition is sponsored by Purdue alumnus and entrepreneur Burton D. Morgan, founder of six corporations and past president of Basic Service Co., an idea-development company; the Krannert School of Management; the Purdue Schools of Engineering; and the Purdue School of Science.

Also sponsoring this year's competition was Ice Miller Donadio & Ryan. The law firm provided $10,000 in prize money and $10,000 worth of legal services.

Writer: J.M. Lillich, (765) 494-2077, mlillich@purdue.edu

Sources: Shailendra Mehta, (765) 494-5703, mehta@mgmt.purdue.edu

Dan Carney, (765) 420-7154, carneyd@purdue.edu

Richard A. Cosier, (765) 494-4366, rcosier@mgmt.purdue.edu

PHOTO CAPTION:

Monocle Technologies team members react to the announcement they are the winners of the 15th annual Burton Morgan Entrepreneurial Competition. Team members are (from left) Larry Riggs, George Laurence (partially obscured), Mark Sepeta and Dan Carney. The competition was Thursday (2/28) at Purdue University's West Lafayette, Ind., campus.

A publication-quality photograph is available at ftp://ftp.purdue.edu/pub/uns/. Photo ID: Burtonwinners.2002

Purdue News Service: (765) 494-2096; purduenews@purdue.edu


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