The following Q &A with Kailey Shara, ATLAS PhD student and a member of the Laboratory for Emergent Nanomaterials,Ìýappeared in CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ's New Venture Challenge (NVC) January 2021 newsletter.Ìý NVC, the university's cross-campus entrepreneurial program and competition, connects the CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ campus with the ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ community to develop and fund innovativeÌýideas. Participants attendÌýyear-round events, networkÌýand collaborateÌýwith mentors to refine their ideas and form startup teams to pitchÌýfor funding (up to $100,000!) at the NVC Championships.
Kailey SharaÌýis the CEO of Chembotix, a company thatÌýis developing a robotic automation platform to dramatically speed up chemistry research and development. As a second-time NVC participant–last year she and her advisor,ÌýCarson Bruns, made it to the semifinals–she's immersed herself in CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ's innovation ecosystem to help get her startup off the ground. HerÌýChemBot research is the premiseÌýfor the company. This year her team includesÌýeight teammates and two advisors.
Q:ÌýWhat is your startup or business idea? How did you come up with your business idea? What inspired you?Ìý
KS:ÌýChemistry is a foundational science for many other disciplines. From pharmaceutical drugs to new materials, technological progress depends on the products of the chemical sciences. Chemistry research is, however, held back by the tedious labor required to synthesize new molecules. While pursuing my undergrad degrees in electrical engineering and chemistry, the engineer in me was struck by how manual most chemistry research still is. Frustrated by this reality, I decided to build my PhD around addressing the key technical challenges holding back the development of chemistry automation systems. Chembotix was born from this research in order to bring these nascent technologies to market.
Q:ÌýWhat CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ academic courses and entrepreneurial resources have you taken advantage of to help you build your business idea or startup?Ìý
KS:ÌýIn addition to completing two customer discovery programs throughÌýÌý(Research-to-Market and Starting Blocks), Chembotix will be one of several startups participating in theÌý, hosted by the Deming Center for Entrepreneurship.ÌýI strongly recommend all of these programs to other CU startups, as well as the frequent workshops and presentations hosted by Venture Partners. Finally, the private company VEX Robotics, in partnership with theÌý, has been supporting my research. Private companies love to help students incubate and develop ideas that may one day be commercialized; you never know who might be able to help you unless you ask!
ATLAS students have successfully competed in past NVCs, including the team co-led by Cody Candler, MS-CTD '20, and Ruhan Yang, MS-CTD student,Ìýwinning fourth place and taking home $12,500 in NVC 12.ÌýTed Thayer,ÌýMS-CTD student, and two team membersÌýwonÌýfourth place and $7,500Ìýat the NVC 11.ÌýRegistration for NVC 14 closes Jan. 29.Ìý