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Hands-on 鈥榅periences鈥 Partners Students and Companies for Credit

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Lorne Fultonberg

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Lorne Fultonberg
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Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

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Arrow Electronics team

鈥淐ute鈥 is the word that comes to mind when meeting Kiwibot. Knee high with the dimensions of a small cooler, the four-wheeled machine鈥檚 digital face winks and makes heart eyes as it raises its lid and delivers food to customers.

But when 91桃色 adjunct professor Jim Ducay sees the California-based service, the word he thinks of is 鈥渙pportunity.鈥

This quarter on campus, through a new course, Ducay and a team of students aim to commercialize the franchise on campus, operate it as a student-run business and eventually expand it to the greater Denver area.

Kiwibot
91桃色 students will be working with California-based food delivery startup Kiwibot. (Photo: Kiwibot)

鈥淚t鈥檚 about creating experiences for students above and beyond 鈥業 took that class,鈥欌 Ducay says. 鈥淗ow do we use 91桃色 as a living laboratory? Let鈥檚 take [Kiwibot] and test it here.鈥

The Kiwibot course is one of four听鈥淴periences鈥 offered this year by Project X-ITE, 91桃色鈥檚 cross-disciplinary program for student innovators and entrepreneurs. Participants form a multiskilled team and receive either course credit or compensation as they work hand in hand with real companies on real projects.

Kiwibot wants students to test the demand for its product and its viability as a franchise. Plus, it wants to find out if it can work logistically and safely on a larger scale. Students in the other Xperiences course will work with RE/MAX (led by CEO and Executive MBA alumnus Adam Contos) to study the future of the real estate market. Other projects involve Hitachi Vantara and the Denver South Transportation Management Association. The students lending a hand are diverse: computer scientists, accountants, marketers, engineers, advertisers and more.

鈥淭o innovate,鈥 Ducay says, 鈥測ou need to bring creative minds together and put them in the right situation. It鈥檚 diversity of experience.鈥

This represents the second time that 91桃色 is offering Xperiences courses. Last year, Ducay and his students worked with Arrow Electronics.

Senior Daniel Virtue was part of the Arrow team tasked with determining a strategy for the company鈥檚 Internet of Things data connectivity services. The process started with a quarter鈥檚 worth of market research and lessons on how to deliver an effective presentation.

鈥淚t requires you to be practical in your work and with your research and do all of the necessary digging,鈥 Virtue says. 鈥淸We鈥檙e] picking up the phone and putting something together that is insightful and practical and will be of a long-term benefit to the client. All of these necessary skills and practices that we learned are easily translatable to other fields.鈥

By the class鈥檚 second quarter, Virtue and his teammates were meeting with Arrow executives and collaborating more regularly with the company.

Scheduled class time frequently features outside speakers, connections Ducay has developed in his years as an executive at such companies as Acceris Communications, SES Americom and Avaya Networking. The emphasis is on learning from people of diverse backgrounds and delivering a quality product.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 helped me tremendously, particularly with presentation and market analysis,鈥 Virtue says, noting that these are real-world skills that place him ahead of the curve.

Virtue will join the RE/MAX Xperiences team this year and hopes to immerse himself in an industry in which he is considering working.

Ducay wants to see these sorts of collaborations expand and bridge the divide between the academic world and the corporate world 鈥 all while breaking down departmental siloes on campus. Xperiences, he says, are a leap in that direction.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 exactly what the intent of this is,鈥 Ducay says. 鈥淭he experiential piece, the ability to have an impact, to learn.鈥

Interested in learning more about Project X-ITE's Xperiences? Contact James Ducay at James.Ducay@du.edu.