NEXUS Summer Program Students Dream Big in Teen Entrepreneurship Challenge
Philanthropist Robert Smith encourages budding entrepreneurs to use technology as a solution and 鈥渇ind joy in collaboration鈥
From dreaming up a competitive gaming event to reimagining how to expand the historic Lincoln Hills resort, more than 50 Colorado high schoolers got the chance to put their creativity to the test by developing business plans at the Inaugural Teen Entrepreneurship Challenge. The 91桃色鈥檚 hosted the , which aims to set up college-bound teens with resources to thrive on campuses across the country.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e an inspiration to us,鈥 Karen Riley, dean of the Morgridge College, told the students at their final presentations. 鈥淵ou give us all hope for the future, because what you鈥檙e able to do is what鈥檚 going to change the world.鈥
One business plan in particular caught the judges鈥 attention. It鈥檚 a vision to preserve the history of one of Denver鈥檚 oldest neighborhoods, Five Points, once called the 鈥淗arlem of the West.鈥 Imagine this: 鈥淢ile High Harlem,鈥 a multipurpose building with studio space for local businesses, a bodega, a museum and a top floor featuring a jazz lounge.
鈥淲e are trying to preserve the past while embracing the future,鈥 Joshua Duran, a student on the 鈥淢ile High Harlem鈥 team, said. 鈥淔ive Points is an ever-growing area, and it is getting gentrified. We simply could not solve for that, so we decided to try to capitalize off of that. Overall, just embrace what Five Points is becoming.鈥
Duran, along with his teammates Anali Blue and Dylan Mendoza, earned first place after the finalists presented their ideas in front of a packed house at Ruffatto Hall on the 91桃色 campus. But one special guest in the audience took them by surprise: Denver native, philanthropist and businessman Robert Smith.
For Blue, Smith鈥檚 appearance pushed her business pitch to the next level. 鈥淢an, I was not expecting him to be out there; then I walk out and I see a familiar face,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hen I was like, OK 鈥 I have to make this great. It pushes me. I鈥檓 a person that doesn鈥檛 like to be comfortable, so those extra pushes of uncomfortable scenarios push me forward to be better.鈥
One of Smith鈥檚 philanthropic ventures, , sponsors the NEXUS Summer Program, which was founded by Denver native Ric Ramsey. No stranger to the 91桃色 campus, Smith delivered the Commencement address in 2017 and received an honorary doctorate in business from 91桃色. What鈥檚 more, his father is a 91桃色 alumnus. And he鈥檚 a believer in the power of education. Earlier this year, he stunned hundreds of Morehouse graduates when he announced he will pay off the student loans of the entire 2019 class.听
Smith left the Inaugural Teen Entrepreneurship Challenge students with some important advice.
鈥淲e were all born into different circumstances, but it鈥檚 your obligation to change that so it fits your narrative,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淵ou are enough, and I hope you all embrace that thought that you are enough to change your condition, to be who you want to be to change your community the way you want it changed. These sorts of programs are the things that empower you with strength, tools and relationships that help you think about it.鈥
For students like Mendoza, this represented a fitting cap to several days of collaboration and innovation.
鈥淢y takeaway was just the amount of teamwork it can take and how well we all meshed together,鈥 Mendoza said. 听听
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