You’re invited to the Governor’s Cup Oral Presentations – FREE and Open to the Public – Apr 21 – Atlantis

Oral Presentations

April 21 – Atlantis Hotel, Reno

9:30 am – 5:30 pm – FREE and Open to the Public

You’re invited to watch Nevada’s best and brightest college and university students present their business plans on Wednesday, April 21 at the Atlantis Casino Resort Spa in the "Treasures" meeting rooms on the second floor in the new conference center. The presentations are free and open to the public.

Presentation Schedule

Governor’s Cup – Undergraduate / Treasures B

10:00 Green Ethos
11:00 Outbox Records, LLC
1:00 Innovative Protection Systems
2:00 Nevada Paper Fuels
3:00 Phoenix Recycling Solutions
4:00 Bioethanol Today

Governor’s Cup – Graduate / Treasures C

10:00 Glyzen Technologies
11:00 Optimal Irrigation System
1:00 Sludge2Power
2:00 Biometric Recognition, Inc.
3:00 TIKI ICE
4:00 AACSS, Inc.

Lt. Governor’s Award / Treasure D

9:30 Sludge2Power
10:30 Nevada Paper Fuels
11:30 Bioethanol Today
1:30 Green Ethos
2:30 Postcom Energy
3:30 SolAir
4:30 NOVAE Nanotechnology

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UNR dominates Gov. Cup finalists

Green energy and technology dominated the finalists’ plans in the sixth annual Governor’s Cup competition, as did teams from the University of Nevada, Reno, organizers and team members said.

Eleven teams from UNR will present business plans to judges Wednesday at the Atlantis Casino, with the chance of walking away with a first-place award of $20,000. They will compete against teams from three other Nevada universities and colleges for nearly $200,000 in total prize money. The majority of this year’s entries are focused on green energy.

The Governor’s Cup, co-sponsored by Nevada’s Center for Entrepreneurship and Technology (NCET) and the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation, encourages entrepreneurship and innovation in Nevada, organizers said. The Cup is divided into undergraduate, graduate and renewable-energy competitions, with first- and second-place teams from each moving on to a tri-state cup between Nevada, Oklahoma and Arkansas.

image Dave Archer, CEO of NCET, said the competition isn’t always based on green technologies, but changes in the market and the shifting of talent between university departments has brought green energy to the forefront.

“Green and clean energy lends itself to the competition well because it’s a burgeoning field right now,” Archer said. “This year there is a group of strong individuals in the engineering program. In 2008 it was a group from the journalism program.”

Of the six finalists from UNR, five modeled their business plans around renewable energy, Archer said. He said UNR and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas dominated the state competition in years past and continue to do so this year.

Emily Somerville, NCET’s senior marketing and events manager, said the majority of this year’s finalists are from UNR.  UNR finalists make up five of the six undergraduate teams, three of the six graduate teams, and five of the seven renewable energy finalists, she said.  The renewable energy competition is also known as the Lieutenant Governor’s cup.

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Governor’s Cup: Who has the best blueprint?

They might not have the glamour of the "Ocean’s Twelve" cast.

But the 12 finalists in this year’s Governor’s Cup competition can sure put together a mean business plan.

A quick look at the final teams in the 2010 Donald W. Reynolds Governor’s Cup Collegiate Business Plan Competition reveals a geek squad that would put Best Buy’s bunch to shame.

RGJcom

Forget scanning your computer for malware. Most of these teams are tackling heavier stuff like nanotechnology, recycled silicon and generating renewable energy from an array of waste materials.

Dave Archer, chief executive officer of Nevada’s Center for Entrepreneurship and Technology, described this year’s crop of finalists as one of the most promising he’s seen in six years of competition.

"I’ve spent most of my life in the corporate world, and I’ve seen a lot of business plans," Archer said. "The creativity and professionalism I’ve seen in the finalists’ business plans this year is as good or even better than what I saw in the corporate world. It’s even more amazing when you think that these finalists are all graduate or undergraduate students."

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