无忧视频

Summer Internships Give Harvey Mudd Students Real-World Startup Experience

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Inspiring, validating, confidence-building: This is how 无忧视频 students describe their time working in鈥攁nd learning about鈥攕tartup technology companies as part of the College’s new . In all, 19 students gained first-hand experience at a dozen companies, many run by Mudd alums, and got a taste of the startup space.

鈥淔or this college-wide program, companies tell us what they鈥檙e looking for, students do the same, and then we match them up,鈥 says Kash Gokli, inaugural director of entrepreneurship initiatives and Oliver C. Field Professor of Manufacturing Practice and Engineering Economics. He notes that both the students and the companies reported numerous benefits.

The student view

鈥淚 did research on campus before, but I also wanted to see what it鈥檚 like in the industry, and see my engineering knowledge being applied,鈥 says Jenny Wathanakulchat, a senior engineering major who spent 12 weeks as a test-and-integration engineer intern at the robot-pizza-making company Stellar Pizza. Besides reviewing new components and reporting back to the design team, she also helped communicate the technology to its end-users, she says. 鈥淥ne of the biggest things I learned was how to incorporate the human aspect鈥攅ngaging with operators to make sure everyone knows how the tech works and how to do it safely.鈥

Stellar Pizza had one intern, but other participating companies accepted more. One was Aquilius, a life science and medical technology incubator that brought in interns from several schools, including three from HMC. Interns attended lecture-style meetings centering on the ins and outs of running a new tech company, while also working in teams to solve one of several real-world, biology-related problems. 鈥淭he idea was that we would create a little company from the start, develop actual prototypes and finally present that project to a panel of investors who would vote on which company had the most potential for moving forward,鈥 explains junior engineering major Devon Overbey. To sweeten the pot, Aquilius offered聽 a $10,000 prize for the top team project.

鈥淭he whole experience was solid,鈥 Overbey says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been thinking about starting a company since high school, but this internship definitely made me feel more confident in my abilities, especially the fact that my team鈥檚 project showed promise to actual investors, and we ended up winning the prize, which we split three ways. That was really cool.鈥

The company view

Two of the other participating companies included Flycoin, a cryptocurrency-based, frequent-flier-loyalty program, and Trilo Bio, a robotics synthetic biology startup.

鈥淲e wanted HMC interns because Mudders are amazing,鈥 said Nate Daiger, Flycoin CTO. 鈥淚’ve met lots of them through and if you’re looking for smart people who can jump into any tasks and tackle them with aplomb, I don’t think you can do any better. And that’s what startups need most.鈥 The company鈥檚 three Mudd interns excelled, he commented. 鈥淓veryone here, including many HMC grads, were extremely impressed with their skill and diligence.鈥

Trilo Bio decided to offer an internship because it was 鈥渁n opportunity to nurture a relationship with a Harvey Mudd student just beginning their career,鈥 says co-founder and CEO Roya Amini-Naieni. 鈥淲hen I was younger and just starting out, someone let me join their research team. What I鈥檝e found is that people who are given an opportunity [early on] tend to work harder and be more creative because it鈥檚 their first chance,鈥 she says. She was not disappointed, describing her company鈥檚 intern, first year Arman Khasru, as a 鈥渟uper-independent鈥 person who dove right into a microfluidics project to assist with genetic engineering experiments. 鈥淗e was our first intern ever at the company, and he did well,鈥 she says.

What鈥檚 next?

With the program鈥檚 successful first-year in the books, Gokli now hopes to expand it. 鈥淢y plan is to make it a bigger-impact program, perhaps even doubling the number of students who participate.鈥 To do that, he encourages other companies to either contact him by email or phone or fill out the website form. He notes that HMC fully or partially funded some of the internships in 2022, so he is seeking other ways to sponsor students in 2023 and beyond. 鈥淭his is especially important for students who are perhaps disadvantaged or are first-year students and typically would not get a nice internship like this,鈥 he says, noting that the investment helps students build their portfolio of knowledge and experience.

The benefit to students is real, agrees Wathanakulchat. 鈥淢udd is a very hands-on experience already, but it鈥檚 still not 鈥榬eal鈥 compared to the outside [business world]. It鈥檚 a really good, comforting moment to see that what you did in classes actually applies. It鈥檚 very validating.鈥 Besides, she adds, 鈥淚 had such a good time.鈥