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Engineering, business students deliver their best DifferenceMaker pitches

Biomedical engineering majors Steven Evangelos, left, and Mark Elman, second from left, let a student try their 'Alarius Table' during the preliminary round of the DifferenceMaker Prototyping Competition at University Crossing. They won the $2,500 first prize.
Biomedical engineering majors Steven Evangelos, left, and Mark Elman, second from left, let a student try their 'Alarius Table' during the preliminary round of the DifferenceMaker Prototyping Competition at University Crossing. They won the $2,500 first prize.  

Steven Evangelos estimates that he and fellow biomedical engineering major Mark Elman practiced their  pitch 500 times this semester.

鈥淲e met routinely, five days a week after school. He鈥檇 jump in my car and we鈥檇 go right into the pitch,鈥 Evangelos says.

The preparation showed, as the duo wowed judges 鈥 and the crowd 鈥 at the 鈥檚 eighth annual Prototyping Competition with a high-energy, 鈥淪hark Tank鈥-worthy presentation of their 鈥淎larius Table,鈥 a device that assesses a user鈥檚 core alignment to help prevent lower back pain and improve athletic performance.

Competing as 鈥淭eam Proprioception,鈥 Evangelos and Elman bested four other finalists for a first-place prize of $2,500 and a berth in the Rist DifferenceMaker Institute鈥檚 $50,000 Idea Challenge this spring.

A night earlier at University Crossing, a trio of sophomore business majors 鈥 Matthew Kinash, Matt Allen and Jackson Sterrett 鈥 topped five other teams to win the ninth annual DifferenceMaker Innovation Contest, sponsored by Digital Federal Credit Union (DCU) and the .

The trio, who are teammates on the UML men鈥檚 hockey team, won $500 each for 鈥淪tockToMe,鈥 an app they鈥檙e developing that allows users to buy and sell opinions about the stock market. They also advanced to this spring鈥檚 Idea Challenge.

The StockToMe team of, second from left, Matt Allen, Matthew Kinash and Jackson Sterrett, hold their winning Innovation Contest checks with Manning School of Business Dean Sandra Richtermeyer and DCU Innovation Manager Thomaz De Moura.
The StockToMe team of, second from left, Matt Allen, Matthew Kinash and Jackson Sterrett, hold their winning Innovation Contest checks with Manning School of Business Dean Sandra Richtermeyer and DCU Innovation Manager Thomaz De Moura.

After pitch contests were held virtually last year because of the pandemic, DifferenceMaker participants and organizers were thankful to resume in-person events this fall.

鈥淚t was great to have students back on stage presenting their innovative solutions 鈥 and to welcome our volunteer judges back to campus,鈥 says , director of the Rist DifferenceMaker Institute, which celebrated its  earlier this semester.

Since its inception, 40 companies have been formed from DifferenceMaker student ventures, attracting $5 million in funding and generating over $4 million in revenue.

Prototyping Competition

Evangelos, a military veteran who earned bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees in business from Framingham State University, has been working on the Alarius Table for more than a decade. It started when he met Jim Marchetti 鈥08, a UML exercise physiology alum, at a health club. They discussed the idea and launched a startup company, Athenetics Human Performance, in 2010.

When Evangelos joined the biomedical engineering program at UML in 2020, Asst. Teaching Prof.  learned about his company and offered to help him collect and publish data on the patent-pending device. Evangelos then formed a DifferenceMaker team with Elman, a research lab partner, and they got to work on their pitch.

鈥淭his is why I came to UMass Lowell 鈥 I love the challenge,鈥 says Elman, a sophomore from Needham, Massachusetts, who had never presented to so many people before. 鈥淚鈥檇 done a slideshow in high school, but this is next-level.鈥

Team Proprioception's Steven Angelos, left, and Mark Elman hold their winning Prototyping Competition check with Dean of Engineering James Sherwood.
Team Proprioception's Steven Angelos, left, and Mark Elman hold their winning Prototyping Competition check with Dean of Engineering James Sherwood.

Diagnosed with scoliosis when he was 10, Elman hopes the Alarius Table can lead to better back pain management. The device has sensors and software that can measure hip and lower back mobility to a ten-thousandth of a degree. With this real-time feedback, it uses proprioception 鈥 the body鈥檚 ability to sense movement and location 鈥 to help users find their optimal alignment.

With their winnings, Evangelos says his team will be able to build two more prototypes (they鈥檙e currently on their seventh iteration) and hire additional research assistants to collect data. In the spring, he says they will begin running Institutional Review Board-approved research studies at UML.

鈥淢arketing is great, but nothing says 鈥楾his works鈥 like a peer-reviewed article,鈥 says Evangelos, a native of Natick, Massachusetts, who hopes to tap into the markets for multi-billion-dollar sports performance and lower back pain. 

Team Tendren, made up of junior biomedical engineering majors Victoria Williams, Ethan Block and Amie Russell, won a second-place prize of $1,500 鈥 and an additional $500 as fan favorite 鈥 for their device which monitors a patient鈥檚 vital signs while they wait to be seen in a hospital emergency room. It features a rechargeable and reusable wrist piece and disposable finger sensor that communicate wirelessly with a nursing triage station.

Senior biomedical engineering major Tze-min Lin received an honorable mention for her prosthetic hand designed to help farmers steer heavy machinery like tractors.
Senior biomedical engineering major Tze-min Lin received an honorable mention for her prosthetic hand designed to help farmers steer heavy machinery like tractors.

Williams, who is from Canton, Massachusetts, says she saw a need for the device after her father had to wait in the ER for almost an hour before being diagnosed with a blood clot in his lungs.

鈥淚t could have caused a stroke or aneurysm, which could have been fatal,鈥 says Williams.

This was the trio鈥檚 second DifferenceMaker entry; they also competed as first-year students.

鈥淲e learned a lot from that experience,鈥 says Block, who is from Georgetown, Massachusetts. 鈥淲e鈥檝e honed our skills and knowledge to come back as a strong team with something feasible.鈥

Team PenGRED, another biomedical engineering team made up of juniors Danielle Bucci and Ryan Butler and first-year students Gabriela Karnesky and Grace Murray, took the third-place prize of $1,000 for their EpiPen device for children.

Team Tendren members, from left, Ethan Block, Amie Russell and Victoria Williams hold their People's Choice check with Dean of Engineering James Sherwood.
Team Tendren members, from left, Ethan Block, Amie Russell and Victoria Williams hold their People's Choice check with Dean of Engineering James Sherwood.

The finalists were judged by Rajia Abdelaziz 鈥16, co-founder and CEO of invisaWear Technologies; Chris McKenna 鈥89, managing partner for intellectual property at Foley & Lardner LLP; Chad LaFrance 鈥88, director of engineering operations at Texas Instruments; Bhupen Shah 鈥92, vice president of engineering at Acacia Communications; and Mark Saab 鈥81, founding trustee of the Saab Family Foundation.

Innovation Contest

Kinash is the founder and CEO of , a patent-pending platform that he calls the 鈥渇irst and only stock opinion marketplace.鈥 He came up with the idea about a year ago after giving some successful stock advice to a friend.

鈥淚 started wondering why there isn鈥檛 a platform where you can easily get a buy and sell point鈥 for stocks, says Kinash, who began talking to one of his business professors, adjunct faculty member , about his idea.

Back home in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, over the summer, Kinash learned how to code apps by watching YouTube videos. He created a rough prototype and raised $50,000 in funding from family, friends and private investors, which allowed him to hire a coder to help him refine the app. When he returned to campus this fall, he recruited Allen and Sterrett to join his DifferenceMaker team as marketing leads.

鈥淒ifferenceMaker really organized my efforts,鈥 says Kinash, who expects to have StockToMe in Apple鈥檚 App Store in the next month. 鈥淚t taught me a lot about goal setting, management and how to look at your competitors.鈥

While the Reddit subforum WallStreetBets and other social media channels have become a popular way for millions of amateur investors to discuss stocks and cryptocurrency, Kinash says they lack efficiency and don鈥檛 provide a way for opinion-makers to monetize their picks.

Monica Nguyen, left, gestures while Simplicity Bank teammates, from left, Saema Nazar, Heer Patel and Yeaharne Hout look on during their Innovation Contest pitch.
Monica Nguyen, left, gestures while Simplicity Bank teammates, from left, Saema Nazar, Heer Patel and Yeaharne Hout look on during their Innovation Contest pitch.

On StockToMe, anyone will be able to sell opinions on long positions (saying a stock will go up over time), short positions (saying it will fall in the short term) and crypto. Users can buy 鈥淪TM coins鈥 to purchase opinions, with the company taking a 5% to 10% cut of the transaction.

鈥淲e want experts to brand themselves and monetize their efforts, and we also want people who are just getting into it, who maybe have a knack for investing, to start making opinions,鈥 Kinash says. 鈥淲e want to level the playing field for anyone who wants to become a portfolio manager.鈥

Every team member who pitched in the Innovation Contest finals received $100 from DCU.

The other teams were:

  • Chain Bank (Aymaan Shaikh and Hirschfield Ssozi), a blockchain-based technology that is similar to cryptocurrency;
  • Credit Champs (Ben McClure and Nick Paolilio), an app to use ATMs hands-free;
  • Labor as a Service (Kevin Zhang), an app that connects gig workers with companies in need of manual labor;
  • Trade Bozz (Toney Benny and Sebastian Pascal), a financial literacy platform focused on helping Gen Z and millennials build wealth through stock and crypto markets; and
  • Simplicity Bank (Yeaharne Hout, Heer Patel, Saema Nazar and Monica Nguyen), an app that teaches financial wellness to children in a fun and engaging way.

The presentations were judged by Dave Carter, DCU director of information systems infrastructure; Sandesh Parulekar, DCU director of information systems development; Barbara Russell, co-founder and managing partner at Cap W Global Advisory/Investment Banking Group; and Michael Zuccaro '83, vice president of financial planning and analysis at Akebia Therapeutics.

鈥淭he partnership with DCU and DifferenceMaker has been so valuable to our college and our university,鈥 says Dean of Business Sandra Richtermeyer. 鈥淚t鈥檚 created so many jobs for students. So many great things have come from this.鈥