藏精阁

TIA November Weekend Highlights Sustainability, Entrepreneur Mental Health, and AI Tools

Back to Entrepreneurship & Innovation Blog

Local and global challenges (read: resource scarcity and pollution) bring about opportunities for innovation and entrepreneurship.

Annika Gupta 鈥27 is building a sustainable, zero-emission, clothing brand that provides stylish garments for young women.

Harshitha Talasila 鈥26 is surveying food waste at dining locations across campus and connecting with local farmers to gauge interest in decentralized composting.

Chloe Tanous 鈥24 and Sarah Stenovec 鈥24 are co-leading a charge to create an online platform for the sustainable exchange of goods in the 藏精阁 community.

These founders, along with those of more than 50 other ventures, participated in the second of four Thought Into Action (TIA) Incubator weekends, held Nov. 3鈥4 in Persson Auditorium and the Batza Meeting Room in Case-Geyer Library. Saturday鈥檚 Grand Challenge panel discussion was 鈥淭he Big Five Imperatives in Sustainability: Opportunities for Local and Global Impact.鈥

While governments across the globe are working to make climate protection a priority, and private sector funding is buoying the transition to renewable energy and reducing waste, the 鈥淓arth is (still) warming at an unprecedented rate, (and) human activity is the principal cause.鈥1

To discuss the challenges and opportunities that lay ahead, TIA assembled an interactive panel discussion:

  • , director of partnerships at Voltpost, a climate-tech company focused on democratizing access to electric vehicle charging
  • , founder of Storyroot, and impact consultant and sustainability advocate
  • , director of sustainability at 藏精阁

You can view a recording of . Joshua Repp, a contributing writer for the 藏精阁 Maroon-News, penned .

Kicking off this second of four Incubator weekend sessions was a keynote by on AIdeation and no-code development. The founder of OpenOcean and a self-described 鈥渆ntreprenerd,鈥 Higuera discussed his novel approach to leveraging AI technology in the entrepreneurial journey. In the past, entrepreneurs entered ideation with the task of generating as many ideas as possible, then converging and filtering them down to those that make the most sense, those that are the most applicable. This would require a group of at least three to four people ruminating for hours if not days.

With AI, 鈥渘ow you have the power of hundreds, maybe thousands of people to help you with this divergent process (in a matter of minutes),鈥 Higuera said. To prove this practice, he solicited input from the room to AI-generate a start-up. Using Google Bard as well as other AI tools for name generation, logo design, and a landing page layout; within 16 minutes the basics for the refuse hauler 鈥淛UNKBUSTERS鈥 were created.

鈥淭he power of AI is in using it as a brainstormer, or idea generator,鈥 Higuera said. 鈥淚 like to think of it as another person that you can kind of bounce ideas off.鈥

You can view the full recording of .

After Saturday鈥檚 Grand Challenge panel discussion on sustainability, TIA鈥檚 entrepreneurs and mentors migrated to the Batza Room for a keynote on the topic of 鈥淓ntrepreneurship and Well-Being鈥 by . (He also spoke earlier in the day to First@藏精阁 program participants.)

Known as Mr. Positive and founder of , Jackson discussed the unique challenges that the entrepreneurship path has on an individual鈥檚 well-being. 

鈥淚 want to shift your perspective,鈥 Jackson said. 鈥淚 want to build your understanding of well-being of happiness, and sort of interrupt your understanding of happiness and what you may think it is.

鈥淎 really big and important topic today is meaning. There are a billion tools I could give you related to your well-being and entrepreneurship. But today, we鈥檙e going to hone in on meaning and meaning-making.鈥

In one segment, Jackson asked the audience for the definitions of 鈥渉appiness鈥 and 鈥渨ell-being.鈥 The former is the result of an emotional response, such as recalling a joyous moment captured in a photo. But that can shift, such as learning that someone in the photo has passed away. Well-being is a deeper story, is more holistic; it is physical, emotional, about purpose, and is other people focused, Jackson said.

Because entrepreneurs can have a moment of happiness 鈥 a major technology breakthrough 鈥 followed by a destabilizing moment 鈥 that technical win is substantially more than their budget can afford, the 鈥渆lixir鈥 to the hardships of entrepreneurship is community.

鈥(We can look) at entrepreneurship as a communal aspect. Even if we have different tasks, many people have co-founders 鈥 that鈥檚 community, right? We鈥檙e in a space of mentorship and community that can be an elixir, something where resilience doesn鈥檛 have to be the pervasive tool that we are utilizing,鈥 Jackson said.

Watch the  on our YouTube channel.

The remaining keynote speakers for Incubator sessions Feb. 2鈥3, 2024, and March 22鈥24, 2024 will be announced at a later date.

Source:
1