Cornell's most daring step: Hoping to find Zuckerberg on new campus

Ranked by Forbes as America's fourth-most entrepreneurial college, Cornell is building a $2 billion campus in New York City, with a singular goal in mind: Be the Stanford of the east

Published: Aug 28, 2014 06:27:25 AM IST
Updated: Aug 28, 2014 08:24:13 AM IST
Cornell's most daring step: Hoping to find Zuckerberg on new campus
Image: Jason Koski / Cornell University
Bill & Melinda Gates Hall, Cornell’s new home of computing and information science, is designed to inspire students and create collaborative spaces

Jake Reisch, then a junior at Cornell University, sketched out his idea for Audiarchy, a company that would rent headsets for trendy silent discos (DJ shows where people listen to music through wireless headphones instead of a normal speaker system). The panel of VCs and entrepreneurs in his Entrepreneurship & Private Equity class on hand that day in May 2012 thought he was onto something.

So Reisch ditched a summer internship and started planning the company with Matt Reiners, his co- founder and childhood friend. That fall they were accepted into eLab, an on-campus accelerator programme for student companies. Thanks to a nifty search engine optimisation, their first major client, New York’s Museum of Modern Art, came knocking before Reisch and Reiners had fully sourced their product; they managed to get 300 headphones for that event and were off and dancing. With support from Cornell—including access to dozens of investors and mentors—they have since booked parties with Red Bull, Nestlé, Viacom, MTV2 and Pepsi, running 100 events in 2013 and clocking six-digit revenues.

This year Audiarchy is on course to do around 250 events and double revenue to over $200,000. Their headphone line is already profitable, and Reisch is now focusing on a new market, pivoting part of the business to provide audio for senior citizens. “There’s this formula coming together at Cornell that is helping startups, and we’re getting support from the alumni, which is why I see so much value in the university,” says Reisch, 24, sitting in the mahogany-walled Cornell Club in midtown Manhattan. “All the feedback and mentorship really helped me navigate the early phases,” Reisch says. “I wouldn’t have jumped into the business had I not gained encouragement from professors.”

Cornell University, with campuses in Ithaca, New York City, and even Doha, Qatar, has roughly 11,100 alums and students, including Reisch, who identify themselves as business founders and owners on LinkedIn. Based on the ratio of these founders to the school’s total student body, Cornell ranks fourth on Forbes’ annual list of America’s most entrepreneurial colleges, just behind Stanford, MIT and Berkeley.

Now the university is taking its most daring step yet, building a $2 billion graduate campus on New York City’s Roosevelt Island that will offer startup-focussed curricula in business and computer science in the hopes of finding the next Zuckerberg—and attracting millions of tuition dollars in the process. Called Cornell Tech, it will cement Cornell’s identity as an innovation powerhouse—and stamp its bearish imprint on Columbia and New York University’s backyard. “Entrepreneurship is a big part of the future of Cornell,” says David Skorton, Cornell’s high-profile president who will next year leave to lead the Smithsonian Institution.

Big Red has a deep entrepreneurial tradition that dates back to co-founder Ezra Cornell, who revolutionised communication technology and founded Western Union in the 19th century. In 1894, 29 years after the school’s founding, Student Agencies, the nation’s oldest independent student-run corporation, was started. Today it is the second-biggest employer of students in Ithaca, New York, after the university. Qualcomm’s co-founder Irwin Jacobs and Workday’s David Duffield (both billionaires who have given generously to Cornell), as well as Arby’s co-founder Forrest Raffel, all attended Cornell in Ithaca, while Drew Nieporent, owner of the Nobu chain and New York’s Tribeca Grill, got his degree from Cornell’s highly regarded School of Hotel Administration.

Cornell's most daring step: Hoping to find Zuckerberg on new campus
The former home of a penitentiary and a lunatic asylum, Roosevelt Island will soon house Cornell Tech, a high-tech graduate campus with a co-working space and offices for startups

In the last decade Cornell has graduated from open-for-business to full-blown startup shop, launching an innovation office that distributes $1 million a year; attracting big-time donors, such as Bill and Melinda Gates, who gave $25 million to build a new computing and information sciences hall on its sprawling Ithaca campus; and winning the bid to build Cornell Tech on Roosevelt Island.

A key initiative has been eLab, the student-business accelerator that backed Reisch. Founded in 2008, it has since helped 40 teams of three or so students develop their businesses through rigorous in-classroom sessions and constant mentorship, culminating in a springtime demo day in front of potential investors, including Big Red Ventures, an MBA student-run venture fund, and Cayuga Venture Fund, an Ithaca-based firm composed nearly entirely of Cornell alumni. The eLab also offers students five-and-a-half credits per semester for the year-long class, which is about a third of an average course load. “For most students it’s a real struggle to keep academics up while running the company,” says Reisch. “I’m a prime example of that—I’ve had to take time off because of my business.”

Also critical to the campus’s startup culture has been PopShop, a student-formed-and-run workspace launched in 2012 as an experiment. Undergraduates scrounged furniture from around campus to outfit the 50-person-capacity space in Ithaca’s College town; next year it will be upgraded, giving students a 4,000-sq-ft office on campus plus another 10,000-sq-ft hub in downtown Ithaca.

“I think college can be a catalyst for entrepreneurship,” says Ali Hamed, 22, a recent graduate who helped set up PopShop, which became permanent after eLab and Student Agencies started funding it. “Being in Ithaca was fantastic because you’re forced to be part of this tightknit community.” Hamed now runs CoVenture, a VC firm in New York that codes for businesses in exchange for equity and has already invested in 13 companies.

“When I was there, there were maybe five or 10 kids working on entrepreneurial projects,” says Aniq Rahman, 27, an entrepreneur who worked on his first company at Cornell, sold it to SoundCloud, and is now working on Moat, an online advertising analytics company with $17.5 million in funding (Forbes is a customer).

Up next is a new incubator called Rev, set to launch this fall. A partnership between Cornell, Ithaca College and Tompkins Cortland Community College, it hopes to funnel Cornell’s startup momentum into the wider community, with help from state funding. “Our students can go through eLab, launch their businesses, and if they decide to stay in Ithaca they can easily move to Rev,” said Tom Schryver, executive director of Cornell’s Center for Regional Economic Advancement and an eLab teacher.

Cornell’s much bigger plans are down in New York, where a fifth of its 2.5 lakh alums live. Cornell Tech, the graduate school that preps students to build projects for local firms and start their own tech firms, started classes in Google’s offices in 2013 with plans to move to the Roosevelt Island campus in a few years, when it’s complete. Built in partnership with Israel’s Technion, the campus, being funded in part by Cornell grads Chuck Feeney and Irwin Jacobs, hopes to generate $23 billion in economic activity over three decades.

“The entrepreneurial passion is something you can’t teach,” admits Dan Huttenlocher, dean of Cornell Tech. “But I think an Ivy League university is a tremendous place to get the skills to make you much more likely to succeed in your entrepreneurial endeavours.”


(This story appears in the 05 September, 2014 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)

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