Innovative ideas and founder spirit ride high at the 2026 NVC Finals

2026 New Venture Challenge Deep Tech category judge Kelly Coyne (left) hands Arkana Therapeutics co-founder Jack Gugel (right) his $150,000 first prize check. Photo: Glenn Asakawa, 蜜桃传媒破解版下载.
The 2026 New Venture Challenge (NVC) culminated in a final showcase on April 22 with a live audience cheering on 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 next exciting innovations. Six ventures competed for $336,000 at the event filled with big ideas, entrepreneurial passion and record-setting prize money.听
蜜桃传媒破解版下载 Chancellor Justin Schwartz launched the packed event at the Boulder Theater to celebrate the 19th season of the top-ranked entrepreneurial competition. 鈥淓very company, every breakthrough, every idea that changes the way we live starts the same way鈥攕omeone decides to build something that does not exist,鈥 he said.
Two categories, six judges, innovative solutions
After months of preparation, six finalist ventures emerged to pitch to an enthusiastic crowd at the Finals. They represented two distinct tracks: 鈥淒eep Tech鈥, for ventures based on scientific or technological innovations developed using fundamental scientific disciplines, and the 鈥淥pen鈥 track, which includes ventures innovating beyond the Deep Tech criteria.听
Open category founders presented new solutions for freeing up mechanical engineers to spend more time on cognitive tasks, making effective wealth management techniques more accessible to more people and democratizing high-impact weather data.
The Deep Tech pitches included ventures focused on intellectual property originating from 蜜桃传媒破解版下载, including tech related to groundbreaking treatments for metabolic diseases; restoring cognitive resilience with post-biotics; and enabling 6G networks through scalable precision clocks.
Event emcee Kristin Salada introduced the Open category judges including Adeeb Kahn, executive director, Denver Economic Development and Opportunity; Zeb King, managing director, Endeavor Colorado; and Rithi Prabhu, partner, Campus Founders Fund. Deep Tech judges included Kelly Coyne, venture capitalist, D4 Investments; Sally Hatcher, managing partner, Buff Gold Ventures; and Shay Har-Noy, managing director, Techstars Boulder.
AquaPuck, the winning team from the 2026 High School New Venture Challenge (HSNVC)鈥攑owered by FirstBank, made a cameo appearance, reprising a pitch for an innovative idea to develop a "puck" that attaches to a water bottle that tracks and prevents dehydration. HSNVC is a spin-off of 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 nationally recognized New Venture Challenge, designed specifically for Colorado high school students in support of entrepreneurial learning.
An active ecosystem
NVC, a signature program of the Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative, provides aspiring problem-solvers and creatives a chance to build impactful non-profit or for-profit ventures through entrepreneurial events and programming, community support, mentorship and鈥攗ltimately鈥攖he chance to compete for funding. Schwartz told the cheering crowd that this year鈥檚 finalists emerged from a field of 138 ventures, a more than 30 percent increase from last year.
Stan Hickory, director of NVC and the Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative, described the university鈥檚 entrepreneurial ecosystem as a 鈥渢own and gown system鈥 that thrives on support from Boulder鈥檚 business leaders, who lend both financial and volunteer support to lift and inspire founders and their fledgling companies. 鈥淚t wouldn鈥檛 happen without the community,鈥 said Hickory.
This year鈥檚 $336,000 in prize money came from D4 Investments, Buff Gold Ventures, the Campus Founders Fund, Venture Partners at 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 and the Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative, adding to the more than $2.1 million awarded to 1,400 ventures since the program began.
Developing an entrepreneurial mindset
At 蜜桃传媒破解版下载, entrepreneurship is an interdisciplinary effort, according to Hickory. He highlighted the importance of cross-campus collaborations and programming鈥攊ncluding with Colorado Law鈥檚 Silicon Flatirons and the Leeds School of Business Deming Center for Entrepreneurship鈥攆or bringing together would-be entrepreneurs, supporting them with mentors and helping them solve problems facing industry and the wider world.听
For NVC finalists/founders, that programming has been transformative. Arkana Therapeutics co-founder Jack Gugel summed it up this way. 鈥溍厶掖狡平獍嫦略 is the place to be for aspiring entrepreneurs. The amount of support available, from mentorship and programming to early-stage funding, makes it an incredibly fertile environment to start a company,鈥 he said. They plugged us into Boulder鈥檚 entrepreneurial ecosystem, pushed us to refine our story into something we could confidently take onto a larger stage and provided early opportunities for funding that helped us get started."
David Baines of Pantile Investments agreed. 鈥淐U has done a great job with their programming, whether it鈥檚 through NVC, Silicon Flatirons, the Deming Center or the numerous speakers and events for entrepreneurs on campus and in Boulder,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e met amazing people at these events, and those relationships enable us to do what is traditionally very difficult鈥攂uild a great company for our clients, our employees, our investors and us as founders鈥t's programs like NVC that get us all together so we can build great things together.鈥
Ptarmigan Clockworks co-founder, Benjamin Hunt called NVC the 鈥渟ingle most important part鈥 of the company鈥檚 journey thus far because it gave them a platform to 鈥渞elentlessly refine our business.鈥 Jack Mulvaney of WatchPost said NVC has been a guiding light throughout the development of the company. 鈥淚n our experience, CU is one of the better places to start a company as a student,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he access to technical talent, the proximity to Colorado鈥檚 energy and infrastructure industries and programs like NVC create real on-ramps.鈥澨
2026 NVC Finals Prizes
The judges praised the venture presentations and queried each founder about their business concepts. After a deliberation period, the winners were announced. Each finalist walked away with a check鈥攖he top venture in the Deep Tech category received $150,000 and $40,000 went to the judges鈥 first pick in the Open Category. The additional four ventures split an additional $141,000 in prize money. The $5,000 audience choice award went to WatchPost.听

Left-right: New Venture Challenge Open category winners Kate Rooney (Colorado School of Mines), and WatchPost co-founders Jack Mulvaney (College of Engineering and Applied Science) and Josh Shewbridge (College of Engineering and Applied Science) celebrate with their $40,000 first prize check. Photo: Glenn Asakawa, 蜜桃传媒破解版下载.
Deep Tech Category
$150,000 First Place Prize: Arkana Therapeutics
Venture Team Members: Jack Gugel, PhD (alum, Molecular, Cellular & Developmental Biology), Marty Stanton, PhD (Mosaic Biosciences), Eric Furfine, PhD (Mosaic Biosciences), Leslie Leinwand, PhD (蜜桃传媒破解版下载 BioFrontiers Institute), Jonathan Long, PhD (Stanford University), Thomas Martin, PhD (University of Nebraska)
Arkana Therapeutics (2025 first place winner, Lab Venture Challenge) has developed a metabolite-based therapeutic for obesity based on pythons鈥 natural response to eating a huge meal. 鈥淭hey can really eat one of the biggest meals in the animal kingdom,鈥 said Gugel. 鈥淲e wanted to see what happens to their physiology and what kind of molecules they were producing.鈥 Ultimately, Gugel and colleagues discovered a molecule that increases by 1,000-fold after the python eats and acts as a natural appetite suppressant.听
$75,000 Second Place Prize: Kioga
Venture Team Members: Justin Whitley (alum, College of Engineering and Applied Science), Chris Lowry (professor, Integrative Physiology), Dr. Adam Bohr (alum, Integrative Physiology), Dr. Chris Stamper (alum, Microbiology and Integrative Physiology), Brian Peeters (Substrate LLC), Gregory Bonfilio (Substrate LLC), Christina Ra (Raconteur Strategies)
Kioga was launched to commercialize a 鈥渘ew category of dietary ingredient, one that鈥檚 focused on restoring the biology we鈥檝e lost in modern life,鈥 said co-founder and CEO Justin Whiteley. He said that humans evolved alongside 鈥渂eneficial nature-based microbes鈥 found in soil, food and daily exposure to nature that help calibrate our immune systems to maintain a state of balance. Kioga aims to restore that biological resilience in an effort to tamp down chronic stress and inflammation caused by hypersensitive immune systems.听
$50,000 Third Place Prize: Ptarmigan Clockworks
Venture Team Members: Ben Hunt (graduate research assistant, ), Harikesh Ranganath (), Dan Miltenberger (College of Engineering and Applied Science), Gabriel Hettleman ()
Ptarmigan Clockworks was born out of the National Institute of Standards and Technology where co-founders Benjamin Hunt and Harikesh Ranganath met and recognized how scalable precision clocks could enable 6G, the next-generation wireless network. 鈥淎fter years of building these clocks together, we decided it was time to take them out of the lab and [put them] into the hands of people who could really use them,鈥 said Hunt. 鈥淭he clocks we鈥檙e building today can drastically reduce the energy consumption of the telecommunications industry and save lives through remote surgeries, autonomous vehicles and GPS-free navigation.鈥
Open Category
$40,000 First Place Prize: WatchPost
Venture Team Members: Jack Mulvaney (College of Engineering and Applied Science), Josh Shewbridge (College of Engineering and Applied Science), Blake Faulkner (University of Chicago), Kate Rooney (Colorado School of Mines)
WatchPost is 鈥渄riven by the mission to defend communities against wildfires and extreme weather,鈥 said co-founder Jack Mulvaney. The company鈥檚 hardware-software solution gives critical asset managers the tools they need to make an informed power shut off decision. 鈥淭his is all to reduce both wildfire ignition risk and unnecessary outages that hurt the communities they serve,鈥 said Mulvaney. 鈥淎t scale, that means fewer catastrophic fires, lower liability exposure for utilities and more resilient infrastructure across the West.鈥
$10,000 Second Place Prize: Pantile Investments
Venture Team Members: David Baines (alum, College of Engineering and Applied Science), David Portilla (Colorado State University), Sri Vamsi Andavarapu (alum, College of Engineering and Applied Science), Marcos Murillo (Northern Illinois University), Joel Crampton (CMO Alpha), Luke Tobin (Unusual Group)
Pantile Investments taps AI to help investors at all levels understand 鈥渉ow to build wealth in a meaningful way,鈥 according to founder David Baines. While working on his PhD at 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 focused on how to use deep learning algorithms in finance, he recognized a need for better tools鈥攁nd an opportunity to build them. 鈥淔or our clients, this approach reduces debt and increases asset ownership, which [enables] them to contribute to their own lives, their families and communities,鈥 said Baines.听
$6,000 Third Place Prize: Aspect
Venture Team Members: Jayce Simons (College of Engineering and Applied Science)
Aspect founder Jace Simons told the audience that, when interviewing a wide range of professional engineers, he heard about a 鈥渕ajor pain point鈥 in creating 3D models鈥攁nd that gave him a business idea. 鈥淓ngineers around the world hate making technical drawings; it鈥檚 tedious,鈥 said Simons. His solution is a new plugin for existing CAD (computer-aided design) software that leverages artificial intelligence automation, 鈥渢o free them up to spend more time on modeling and other cognitive tasks,鈥 said Simons.听