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Issue date: 10/10/07 Section: News

A trend of innovation creeps up on campus

Across the school, thinking outside the box becomes the norm

Rebecca Kaplan

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Emily Cieri of Wharton Entrepreneurial Programs talks about PennVention entries to attendees of the Wharton Entrepreneurial Fair on Sept. 19th. The fair was held to encourage people to start their careers independently.
Media Credit: Toby Hicks
Emily Cieri of Wharton Entrepreneurial Programs talks about PennVention entries to attendees of the Wharton Entrepreneurial Fair on Sept. 19th. The fair was held to encourage people to start their careers independently.
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It may seem like all Wharton students are starting their own companies before they graduate, but it turns out their community is not as large as it appears.

Emily Cieri of Wharton Entrepreneurial Programs said she is looking to expand awareness of entrepreneurship opportunities beyond the 300 to 350 students who are currently thinking about launching their own businesses.

Though a business-owning craze is sweeping the campus - and especially at Wharton, whose students Cieri estimates to make up 60 to 65 percent of aspiring entrepreneurs - students do not generally feel like they have to start a business without a diploma.

Wharton senior Derek Zoch, who is in the early stages of manufacturing the "QuickerKicker," his PennVention-winning creation that simulates game situations for kicker, says there is "no pressure."

PennVention is an annual Weiss Tech House-sponsored competition that judges student inventions.

"This is all just for me," Zoch said. "I don't really compare myself to anybody here; I just do things for myself."

Beyond Wharton, that no-pressure sentiment may vary.

Engineering senior Richard Fong, who attended the Venture-a-Guess kickoff, said he still "feels like a minority" who has to "compete with Wharton students to create things."

Nearly 100 students are currently competing in Wharton's new "Venture a Guess" competition, where students answer weekly quiz questions about entrepreneurship to win prizes like Southwest Airlines plane tickets and Flyers tickets.

About 50 students showed up at the "Venture a Guess" kickoff last month to chat with other student entrepreneurs, like Wharton senior Jason Gurwin, who is creating a social networking site to connect college athletic recruiters with high-school athletes.
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