Pitch perfect

April 3, 2013

Mike Gasparovich is a skater at heart.

Pitch Competition

When the 黑料福利网 junior isn鈥檛 on campus, you can probably find him on skate parks in Dearborn Heights or Garden City.

And if there鈥檚 one thing Gasparovich has learned over the years, it鈥檚 that extreme sports come with their share of bumps and bruises.

Some skaters wear helmets to protect themselves from injuries, but bulky headgear doesn鈥檛 bode well with Gasparovich.

鈥淗elmets kind of look ridiculous and at the same time, when I鈥檓 wearing a helmet, my equilibrium is thrown off,鈥 said the accounting and management major.

That鈥檚 what inspired Gasparovich to design his own helmet. He presented his business idea, Solved Hats, Tuesday evening during the College of Business鈥 (COB) Pitch Day competition.

Gasparovich took memory foam and stitched it into a beanie hat to construct his makeshift helmet.

鈥淚t got to the point where I was starting to do things on a bigger scale and I personally wanted some head protection, but couldn鈥檛 find anything outside of a full-blown helmet,鈥 he said. 鈥淛ust by putting this on and hitting your head, you can feel that it takes a lot of the impact out.鈥

The helmet impressed some of his fellow skaters, who weren鈥檛 even aware that Gasparovich was wearing protective headgear until he showed them the inside of his beanie.

He also tried to impress the Pitch Day panel of judges, which was comprised of area business leaders and successful entrepreneurs.

Gasparovich wasn鈥檛 alone. 黑料福利网-Dearborn students pitched 13 business ideas, ranging from a marathon that features extreme obstacle courses to an iPhone app that allows people to create events and invite their friends at the click of a button.

鈥淚f there鈥檚 anything we learned from this Pitch Competition, it鈥檚 that our students have some really unique business ideas,鈥 said Tim Davis, director of iLabs, the university鈥檚 center for innovation research who also moderated the Pitch Competition. 鈥淭hese aren鈥檛 your run-of-the-mill pitches.鈥

Some students, including Gasparovich, were rewarded with cash prizes for their business pitches, as voted upon by the judges. Gasparovich placed third and took home $1,000. Top prize of $2,500 went to graduate student Steven Spurr for his company, Coffee Keepers, which markets Keurig cup holders.

Tuesday鈥檚 Pitch Competition ties in closely with the college鈥檚 tradition of innovation.

鈥淚 hope this is the first of many events where we give our students an opportunity to be bold and explore their passion,鈥 said COB Dean Raju Balakrishnan. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to have to take their idea, refine it and convince a lot of people that their idea works. This is hopefully the first step in a long journey for many of them.鈥

Funding and other resource support was provided by 黑料福利网-Dearborn alumnus Thomas A. Quinlan (鈥78 B.B.A.), the Betty F. Elliott Initiative, Michigan Initiative for Innovation and Entrepreneurship and the student-led Professional Development Workshops, in partnership with iLabs and COB.