UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Teams of entrepreneurial undergraduate Penn State students can apply for microgrants of up to $500 in seed money to help get their ideas off the ground.
The microgrants are provided through Lion LaunchPad and in cooperation with the Penn State College of Engineering and its School of Engineering Design, Technology, and Professional Programs’ (SEDTAPP) engineering entrepreneurship (E-SHIP) program. The funding can help student teams during the very early stages of their idea development and help prepare them to later compete in business competitions at Penn State, as well as enter programs such as the Happy Valley Launchbox FastTrack Accelerator, Summer Founder Program from Invent Penn State and TechCelerator through Ben Franklin Technology Partners.
To qualify, one team member should have a SEDTAPP or intercollege minor in entrepreneurship and innovation minor (ENTI) affiliation.
The application, found here, requires that teams:
- Describe the product or service
- State the customer value proposition
- Describe the target customer and target market
- Discuss any customer discovery
- Outline the path to revenue feasibility and how the idea will financially support a business
- List any specific items to purchase, as purchases must be made on behalf of the team because funds cannot be directly distributed
Lion LaunchPad offered similar grants in the past, with one beneficiary being Matt Woods, co-founder and former chief technology officer of Xact Metal, a 3D metal-printing company.
Woods, a mechanical engineering undergraduate, was deeply connected with the entrepreneurial and engineering ecosystems during his undergraduate years at Penn State, first at Penn State Berks and then at the University Park campus. He participated in the Lunar Lion competition, the Inc.U student pitch competition, the Lion LaunchPad business accelerator and other entrepreneurial programs available through the College of Engineering and Smeal College of Business.
After an internship at SpaceX, Woods applied for and received a $500 Lion LaunchPad microgrant as he was developing a prototype metal 3D printer. This paid for machine time at the Bernard M. Gordon Learning Factory as well as metal powders from eBay.