It was always his dream class — a class he wishes he could have taken in college.

portrait of Chambers inside Blackstone LaunchPad

Blackstone LaunchPad director Bryan Chambers, who teaches two entrepreneurship classes in the Naveen Jindal School of Management, received the Investment Catalyst Award from Tech Titans for his work with the UT Dallas Seed Fund.

A few years ago, Blackstone LaunchPad director Bryan Chambers set out to design a program at The University of Texas at Dallas that would teach the business of venture capital and entrepreneurial concepts and empower students to invest in technology startups.

On Aug. 9, Chambers was honored with a 2018 Tech Titans award for his work with the UT Dallas Seed Fund. The Investment Catalyst Award recognizes an organization for completing a significant technology-related investment transaction that will impact and deliver significant long-term economic prosperity for the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.

Through the seed fund, students work directly with high potential startups on their funding and growth plans, Chambers said.

“The inspiration for the class was to create a valuable entrepreneurial experience by offering transparency into the work of great founders and startups,” he said. “Some of my best entrepreneurial lessons have been from working closely with founders. Students get to roll their sleeves up and get their hands dirty while applying both entrepreneurial and financial concepts in this course.”

Launched in January 2017, the seed fund invests exclusively in technology startups founded by UT Dallas students, faculty, staff, alumni and other affiliates. Structured under the Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, the program seeks to invest in early-stage businesses with inventions, discoveries, products or services that have achieved proof of concept, or a prototype, and are ready for commercial product development.

The inspiration for the class was to create a valuable entrepreneurial experience by offering transparency into the work of great founders and startups. … Students get to roll their sleeves up and get their hands dirty while applying both entrepreneurial and financial concepts in this course.

Bryan Chambers, director
of Blackstone LaunchPad
who teaches Seed Fund Support
at UT Dallas

Chambers also initiated and donated to a new endowed development structure formed in partnership with the Naveen Jindal School of Management in which the school will match 100 percent of funds donated to the program.

For these startups, this funding comes at a critical time in their lifecycles.

“It’s the riskiest stage of building a company — $25,000 or $50,000 to a startup means potentially three to six months of extra runway,” Chambers said. “That can change the whole course of a business. Oftentimes, the very first outside investment is coming from us, which can help position the company to work with professional investors and venture capitalists.”

In addition to his director roles with the fund and Blackstone LaunchPad — UT Dallas’ entrepreneurship program launched in 2016 with $1 million from the Blackstone Charitable Foundation, matched by $1 million from the University — Chambers teaches two entrepreneurship classes in the Jindal School.

A graduate-level Startup Launch course enables students to launch companies while receiving academic credit and offers mentorship from faculty and local entrepreneurs.

Chambers’ “dream class,” Seed Fund Support, is an undergraduate course that enables students to work with startup founders and local venture firms to evaluate the risk and potential of business models and ultimately make a recommendation to the fund about which companies to support with a financial grant.

Tina Dimitrova, a senior finance major, participated in the Seed Fund Support course for two consecutive semesters, directing the investing of $75,000 from the seed fund in two startups over the course of a school year.

“There is no better way to learn about venture investing and startups than actually participating in the process and interfacing with professionals,” Dimitrova said. “The course supports venture creation within the community through offering access to mentorship and introductions to prospective customers, employees and investors, as well as providing capital.”

Being in the investor’s seat gives students an immense amount of responsibility and pride, along with an understanding of what it takes to be an entrepreneur, Chambers said.

“Not everybody has an idea, or a passion, or a reason to start a business, but everybody can get behind someone else’s passion sometimes,” said Chambers, who also serves as accelerator director and venture partner at Capital Factory. “You can get a sense very quickly of how competitive it is to build a startup and compete in the market by playing this role.”

Tech Titans, a technology trade association in Texas, represents a quarter of a million employees through its 300 member companies. The nonprofit annually recognizes outstanding technology companies and individuals in the North Texas area who have made significant contributions to their industries.

UT Dallas’ Connect-Inspire-Guide camp for incoming female freshmen was a finalist for the Tech Titans of the Future University Level Award.

 

UT Dallas Seed Fund Numbers

  • In its first year, the fund raised $350,000.
  • A total of $125,000 has been invested via grants.
  • Faculty and student teams have evaluated 83 University-affiliated startups.
  • There have been four successfully funded startups — ShearShare, Fan Guru (formerly Cosmunity), EverThread and Collbox — that have raised $5.5 million in total venture funding.