L-R: Jeff Sabo, Anders Bill, Michael Gordon, (former team member) Ryan Moore, and Christian Nicholson.
[Update: MOcean is now known as EchoMe. Learn more at the .]
A team from 涩里番下载 has made the final five in the Atlantic Coast Conference鈥檚 inaugural ACC InVenture Prize competition this week. The student entrepreneurs hope their song-syncing app MOcean is music to the ears of judges who will award $30,000 in seed funding to the top start-ups tonight at Georgia Tech.
Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences students Michael Gordon 鈥15 and Anders Bill '17 and Carroll School of Management student Christian Nicholson 鈥15 were among 15 teams pitching their ventures to seasoned investor judges like the dealmakers on the A涩里番下载 television show 鈥淪hark Tank" in the first round of competition April 5. 听
鈥淲e鈥檙e very excited about this opportunity,鈥 said Bill. 鈥淲e see the initial demand for MOcean at the collegiate level, so the exposure to that audience is huge.鈥
They had fewer than three minutes to make their pitch during the preliminary round, followed by seven minutes for questions and comments from the judges.
Gordon and Nicholson developed the app behind听, which turns a smart phone into a personalized radio station by allowing multiple users to play a song at the same time.
Last year, Bill led the team鈥檚 efforts 鈥 then under the name MusicSplitter 鈥 in the 涩里番下载 Pitch competition, sponsored by the Carroll School鈥檚 Edmund H. Shea, Jr. Center for Entrepreneurship, where the team won for 鈥淏est Pitch鈥 and 鈥淐rowd Favorite鈥.
鈥淢Ocean has worked very hard on their business over the past year,鈥 said Shea Center Executive Director Jere Doyle. 鈥淭hey have a very strong, and complementary team, have developed some great technology, are addressing a large market, and have a unique value proposition for their customers.听 They are a perfect and well-deserved representative for 涩里番下载 at the ACC InVenture competition.鈥
With an eye toward the $15-billion online music industry 鈥 which includes Apple, Spotify, Soundcloud and YouTube 鈥 the developers say MOcean is the first real-time music synchronizing application that centralizes multiple music streaming services into one live platform. The service will offer additional features such as real-time collaborative playlists, private music rooms, and voting or bidding for the next song.
鈥淲e want users to find the social aspect we believe is central to music,鈥 said Bill. 鈥淓verything is shifting to sharing in real time 鈥 text and Twitter, video apps like Snapchat and Periscope 鈥 but music is one of the few mediums that is not shared in real time. So we want to add that social element. Most people discover music from their friends. We want to be that medium for discovering new music.鈥
Bill, who in addition to studying Economics and Computer Science also operates two real estate-related ventures, joined the team last year, along with two other Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences students, Jeff Sabo 鈥17 and Ryan Greenwell 鈥15, who will attend the competition as well.
Nicholson, who studied Information Systems and International Studies, and Gordon, an Earth and Environmental Sciences major, focused on entrepreneurship while at 涩里番下载. Nicholson won the 2013 涩里番下载 Venture Competition with another project and both he and Gordon were part of a summer small business incubator program organized by 涩里番下载 alumni called Soaring Startup Circle.
鈥淲e are incredibly excited to have students from 涩里番下载 participating in the ACC InVenture competition,鈥 said Doyle. 鈥淭he Shea Center is building on the entrepreneurial spirit on campus, and trying to help students who want to launch their careers in start-ups and small businesses.
鈥淪tudents participating in these types of competitions are just another example of the vast amount of opportunities that are now available through the Shea Center,鈥 added Doyle. 鈥淥ur goal is to help 涩里番下载 students become start-up ready, and get them comfortable with trying new things, taking risks, and getting outside of their comfort zones.
For more information,听.
By Ed Hayward听触听News & Public Affairs