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The Hult Prize has announced the winning team from BHU that has advanced to the 8th annual regional finals of the competition.
The Hult Prize is a start-up accelerator for social entrepreneurship. The annual initiative is the world’s largest student competition and crowdsourcing platform for social good. This year, the Hult Prize is focused around finding solutions for building sustainable, scalable, social enterprises that restore the rights and dignity of 10 million refugees by 2022.
Dhruv Goel, a junior undergraduate and the Campus Director at Hult Prize Foundation is confident in his fellow students, “It is not every day that we get such platforms to showcase our ‘out of the box’ thinking. We have the potential as well as the dedication to bring about a catalytic change in the world.”
The Hult Prize was organized for the very first time in BHU and saw 12 shortlisted teams competing out of 32 registered ones. These teams coming from Banaras Hindu University MBA, Ph.D. and undergraduate programs tested their grit in building a viable solution to this global social issue. Jury for the Hult Prize at BHU had- Mr. Deepak Gadhia (Chief Mentor, EnerSun Power Tech), Mr. Japan Vyas (Managing Partner, Sixth Sense Ventures), Mr. Bethun Bhowmik (ex-Regional Head, East & South India OLA) and Mr. Puneet Raman (Social Entrepreneur, IIM-A)- as its panel members.
There was a tie between, Team Adept and Team InstaRef Support who competed in the Hult Prize@ BHU event here on November 12, 2016 and built a solution to this year challenge by President Bill Clinton around ‘The Refugee Crisis & Life in Slums’. All team members are currently enrolled in B.Tech. Program at IIT (BHU) Varanasi.
While ‘Adept’ aims at creating a holistic platform first by managing the household waste in slum areas in an unconventional manner; InstaRef Support has developed a model where they’ll connect refugees having eclectic range of skills to create a self-sustainable community.
Prof.
P. K. Mishra, the Coordinator of Malaviya Centre for Innovation, Incubation
& Entrepreneurship came up to support the teams who couldn’t make it to
the finals, “We would love to nurture these ideas at MCIIE. Also we’d help them
further to develop their business models so as to make them competitive enough
to undergo incubation.”
The teams will now move on to compete at the Hult Prize regional finals in January
2017 in New Delhi, then followed by at one of Hult International Business School’s
five campuses in Boston, San Francisco, London, Dubai and Shanghai.
Following the regional finals, one winning team from each host city will move into a summer business accelerator program, where they will receive mentorship on advisory and strategic planning as they create prototypes and set-up to launch their new social business. The final round of competition will be hosted at the Clinton Global Initiative Annual Meeting, where one team will be selected as the Hult Prize recipient.
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