From Classroom to Startup

By Robyn Ross

For Regina Vatterott ’16, entrepreneurship is more than an academic exercise. In less than a year, she has taken her product — a “smart” pill container that helps people manage their medications — out of the classroom and into the Austin startup scene.

Pitch Night

The nervous energy in the room is palpable, but it’s balanced by the promise of champagne. Pitch Night is the final meeting of the summer-long Venture Forth class, a boot camp for startups at Austin’s Tech Ranch, an education and networking hub for technology entrepreneurs. A dozen participants, and twice as many friends and family, perch on brightly colored chairs in the second floor atrium of an office building on the north side of town. Before the students toast their 10 weeks of hard work, they stand and present their concepts: a shared commercial kitchen space, a roommate-matching platform, a socially conscious import business.

The Business Plan Competition

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A professional headshot of a woman in a burgundy jacket

At 8 p.m., it is time for the final pitch, delivered by the two youngest Venture Forth participants. Regina Vatterott ’16 and her co-founder, Abe Matamoros, a recent University of Tulsa graduate, make their way to the front of the room.

“We want to start by telling you about Abe’s grandfather, our inspiration,” Vatterott begins, as a snapshot of the elderly man is projected onto the screen behind her.

“He spends too much time organizing his medications. In fact, there was a time recently when he stopped taking them, because organizing them was so time-consuming. He ended up getting very sick. He was lucky that he recovered, but each year in the United States 125,000 people die because they’re not taking their medications consistently or correctly.” Medication nonadherence costs the U.S. healthcare system between $100 billion and $289 billion annually.

She advances to the next slide, a picture of a jewelry-box-like container outfitted with LED lights and a digital clock.

“Our solution, the EllieGrid, is not just a medical device, but an attractive accessory,” Matamoros continues. “It’s paired with a mobile app that can send a reminder to caregivers, who can check in with family members like my grandfather to make sure they’ve taken their pills.”

As the duo finish their pitch, their classmates applaud, and then the questions begin: How will the Affordable Care Act affect your market? How will you test your medical device? Have you considered Kickstarter as a funding source?

Vatterott smiles. “We appreciate the tough love. Please keep the questions coming.”

As volunteers in the back of the room set out snacks and pop open the champagne, a member of the class raises his hand. “I understand that you’ve already received a million-dollar investment offer. Did you accept it?”

Five months earlier, on March 28, 2015, Vatterott makes a different pitch, alone, to an audience of judges in the St. Edward’s University Business Plan Competition.

She recounts how the idea for the business formed with the frightening incident with Matamoros’ grandfather. Looking for a device to help the elder Matamoros keep track of his medications, the two longtime friends found only cheap day-of-the-week plastic pill containers and $500-plus “smart” pill containers that could be programmed with dosages and times. So they built their own, using supplies from RadioShack and Hobby Lobby.

The device she’s pitching in her business plan has compartments for multiple medications, each of which is meant to hold the entire bottle’s worth of pills, and a digital clock. The user or caregiver programs it with information about how many pills should be taken and at what time of day. When it’s time to take a pill, that compartment lights up in a color associated with the dosage (white for one pill, red for two) and makes a sound. After the patient has taken the medicine, he presses a button to turn off the light, and that information is sent via the associated app to the smartphone or computer of his care provider or a relative who’s signed up for alerts.

Because the person who sets up the system pours in the whole bottle of pills, instead of counting them out into day-of-the-week pill organizers, the EllieGrid streamlines medication management. In her research, Vatterott tells the judges, she’d learned caregivers’ biggest complaint is the time it takes to organize medications. “That really affects quality of life,” she says. “The EllieGrid is user-friendly and will save lives.”

But it is still a long way from hitting the market. “How do you plan to manufacture your product?” one of the judges asks. Vatterott answers that she doesn’t know yet. Healthcare regulations restrict what materials can be used to make the device and the information that can be used in the smartphone app. She’s also still evaluating the name. “The idea is that elephants — the ‘Ellie’ — have good memories, and we want to help people remember everything,” she explains. “And ‘Ellie’ works with the LED lights. ‘Grid’ is the grid of the pill container. Although we think the name is a good one, it might not be intuitive to everyone.

“But that’s also part of the process when you start a business,” she tells the panel. “Maybe you fail, but you fail fast, fix it and move on.”

“What does that mean to you?” one of them asks. “I understand you’re the vice president of the entrepreneurship club here. How do you tell your fellow students it’s OK to fail?”

Vatterott nods. “Failure” might be a chance to identify and correct a problem, she explains, and the sooner an entrepreneur can get over her fear of it, the better. “I tell everyone in the club to talk about their business ideas with whoever will listen. One benefit of talking about your idea out loud is just hearing your own flaws that you can fix. If you don’t tell anyone, you’re not going to hear what your customers actually want. Talk to as many people as you can. There’s no such thing as bad feedback.”

The judges withdraw to deliberate. Executive in Residence Tony Alvarado, the interim director of the Entrepreneurship program and Vatterott’s academic advisor, has been watching in the back of the room. He notes that she’d performed well: She hadn’t used notes or stood behind the lecturn, she’d maintained eye contact and a relaxed demeanor, and she’d been honest when she didn’t know the answer to a question.

“When you’re talking to investors, you’re marketing yourself as much as your venture,” he says. “Regina tells you a little bit about herself, how she got involved with the venture, what her passion is about it — and in doing that she’s also telling you about who she is and what her values are. She has this intangible quality of coming across as a genuine, authentic person, and not pulling any punches.”

In a moment, the judges emerge and announce their decision: Vatterott won first place in the competition, which comes with a $2,500 purse.

The Work Session

Four months have passed, and Vatterott and Matamoros’ venture continues to gather steam. They are camping out at a north Austin coffee shop, going over their pitches for this week’s important meetings. Tomorrow night Matamoros will present at the Austin Hardware Startup Meetup at Capital Factory, an incubator downtown; it’s a chance to put out feelers for a technical co-founder. The next day they’ll get feedback from staff at Memorial Hermann–Texas Medical Center in their hometown of Houston.

But tonight they have class, the fourth meeting of their Venture Forth program. Started by Tech Ranch founder and CEO Kevin Koym, the Venture Forth program teaches people how to turn business ideas into reality. Paula Sabrsula MBA ’12, who has experience in the pharmaceutical industry and mentors young entrepreneurs, sponsors their attendance in the program, an intense course that only a handful of college students have ever taken. Every week starts with a “jam session” dedicated to longer and longer pitches.

Pitching is old hat for Vatterott, who’s been presenting business ideas since her freshman year in the business Living Learning Community. But last week something clicked in a way it hadn’t before. Asked to come up with an elevator pitch on the spot, Vatterott explained the EllieGrid’s lifesaving capabilities and wrapped up with a new ending: “What is this technology worth to you? Or better yet, who is worth it to you?”

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Regina Vatterott pitching to a woman across the table

When she finished, the cohort was silent. “It was because they could see the pathway to how this venture could actually make a difference in the world,” Koym recalls. “It immediately gave permission for some of the other people in the room to start speaking about their own ventures that way. It’s not until someone’s bold like that, that people see there’s really a chance to use the tools of business to change the world for the better.”

Not only had the Tech Ranch cohort been moved by Vatterott’s bold pitch; to her surprise, the group also had gotten attached to the name “EllieGrid.” So Vatterott and Matamoros worked with a lawyer to do a patent search — checking to see if any very similar products were already on the market — and, finding none, they filed a provisional patent that would protect their idea while they hired an industrial designer. The two were leaning toward a firm in Mexico City that Matamoros had vetted via phone and an in-person visit.

“Something we told them is we don’t want it to look like a medical device, because we think that actually makes people feel stigmatized,” he explains between sips of ice water at the coffee shop. “If we can build a beautiful accessory that just so happens to save your life, we think people will be more attracted to that — something you could put on your bedside table that doesn’t look like a healthcare device.”

They spread out photos of their new functioning prototype, the first and last one they’ll use a 3D printer to make. They used the slow and error-prone printer for the prototype but plan to manufacture the actual devices with injection moldings instead. First, Vatterott and Matamoros need to find a third co-founder, someone with experience in electronic components who can work on the circuit board.

Vatterott isn’t the kind of lifelong entrepreneur whose parents remember her selling pencils to her first-grade classmates or squeezing hundreds of dollars out of a lemonade stand. She didn’t even know what to study in college until she found the Entrepreneurship major at St. Edward’s. But it turned out to be the perfect fit.

“I thought it was really exciting because you could learn how to do things from top to bottom,” she says. “I didn’t only want to study accounting, or finance, or management — I wanted to learn how it all worked. That way I could go into a meeting and feel comfortable talking to everyone there.”

And she was motivated by her Catholic upbringing, which nudged her toward a career that would give back. In high school she learned about social enterprise companies like TOMS Shoes, whose “one for one” model builds a donation into every purchase. “I knew I wanted to help people in whatever way I could, and I saw entrepreneurship as a sustainable and scalable way to do that,” she says.

That mission fits well with the focus on social enterprise at St. Edward’s, says Alvarado.

“One of the things we emphasize in all of our courses, because of the mission statement and Holy Cross heritage, is that students at St. Edward’s are not just getting a degree in entrepreneurship,” he says. “Their job is also to look at the problems that we have in our society and our community, and find solutions to those problems. If someone is motivated just by money, that’s probably going to be a very short ride because of the hours that you spend and the sacrifices that you make as an entrepreneur. But if you’re passionate about improving somebody’s life as a result of a solution you’ve found, you’re going to be persistent and follow through.”

The Offer

The elevator doors open, and Vatterott steps onto the 16th floor of the Omni Hotel building in downtown Austin. The receptionist smiles and waves her into Capital Factory. Through the partnership between Capital Factory and St. Edward’s, Vatterott has access to the accelerator’s work areas, video production studio, “office hours” with expert mentors and daily opportunities to network with Austin’s community of entrepreneurs.

After stuffing her lunch into the sleek communal fridge, Vatterott winds her way to an empty seat. She passes the accouterments of the startup scene: a rack of bicycles on the wall, a beer keg, desks connected to treadmills and stationary bicycles, exercise balls, enormous beanbag chairs. Most of them are occupied by casually dressed people in their 20s, 30s and 40s, who are either staring intently at their laptop screens or talking animatedly with colleagues.

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A woman in a burgundy sweater sits on an orange chair and smiles at the camera

Two months ago, when Matamoros gave his pitch here at the Austin Hardware Startup Meetup, he and Vatterott had been approached by an engineer named Hieu Nguyen, a new arrival to Austin, who’d become their much-needed technical co-founder. Now all they need is a software developer.

And they need one other thing: money. So far, the co-founders have paid the venture’s expenses from Matamoros’ savings. They can offer additional partners only equity in the company, not a salary, which isn’t unusual for startups. But they’ll need money for ongoing legal services and supplies, like circuit boards and hardware.

Sitting at one of the long communal tables, Vatterott lays out their options. They could pursue funding from an angel investor, someone who, in addition to investing his or her own money in the company, could offer EllieGrid business or technical expertise for a number of years. They could work with a venture capitalist or VC firm, which would offer multiple investors’ pooled money in exchange for a percentage of the company. They could start a crowdfunding campaign, like Kickstarter.

“If we do a Kickstarter,” she explains, “it would be less about raising money than a strategic move to validate our idea. If we do go to an investor or a VC firm, we could say, ‘Look, we have this many pre-sales,’ and that would hold a lot more weight.”

And one investor has already decided the EllieGrid is going places. Matamoros had been in conversation with an angel investor interested in the tech industry when the man offered him $1 million in exchange for a share of the company.

“A million dollars is so tempting — and it was refreshing to think about having a salary,” Vatterott says. The co-founders talked it over with their Tech Ranch cohort and with Koym and ultimately decided to decline the offer. “We knew we could bootstrap the company a little longer,” she says, “and put it in a better position to receive investment.”

They decided to let the industrial designers finish their work, Vatterott explains, and then approach investors with a top-notch minimum viable product. A more developed EllieGrid would likely lead to a higher valuation for the company. “That first investor might be a great option,” she said, “but it’s like buying the first car you see.”

While they are the youngest members of their Tech Ranch cohort, the EllieGrid team is the only one to receive a funding offer during the course. And that isn’t the only way Vatterott stands out, says Jaime Sutton, Tech Ranch’s director of marketing and operations. Vatterott isn’t afraid to ask questions when she doesn’t understand the material, or when other entrepreneurs aren’t explaining their ventures clearly.

“That created a dynamic where the entrepreneurs felt safe learning from each other,” Sutton says, “and Regina’s willingness to learn and help others learn through example is really powerful.”
With the conversations around her at Capital Factory blending into a comfortable background noise, Vatterott opens her trusty calendar. She needs to plan her schedule for Austin Startup Week, when she might meet the software developer who’d complete their team. She needs to work on EllieGrid’s website. And she has to manage her 13 hours of coursework.

“The startup world isn’t always glamorous like social media and movies make it out to be,” she says. “It’s a lot of long hours.

But a big part of my motivation is saving lives, and that’s why I keep going. And the entrepreneurship and startup scene is so exciting: the people, the city, the university. If you’re willing to put yourself out there, there’s an incredible amount of opportunity.”

The Acceleration

Since October 2015, things have been moving fast for the EllieGrid team — which now includes Vatterott, Matamoros, Nguyen and Nic Dhanam, a college friend of Matamoros’ who is the startup’s chief product officer. They’ve talked up the startup at other pitch competitions. They were finalists in the CVS Retail and Health Innovation Challenge at Wake Forest University, and they won first place (and a $1,000 check) at the IBM Cultivate Health Hackathon in Austin. They’re applying to various accelerators, a more intense version of the Venture Forth class that comes with mentors, connections and guaranteed investment dollars.

In mid-January, they were announced as finalists at the IOT/M2M Innovation World Cup in Barcelona. They’ll have the opportunity to present EllieGrid on stage, if they can find a way to get to Spain by the end of February. That nomination also means expediting the prototype, so they have a working device to show.

These are all big steps for a company that started just over a year ago as a DIY experiment with hobby shop parts. To keep up with Vatterott’s progress, visit EllieGrid.com or follow @EllieGrid on Twitter.