A cohort of entrepreneurs and small business owners
made their final pitches to judges, family and friends on November
20, wrapping up a 13-week incubator program, ElevateWest
Accelerator, by GVSU’s Muskegon Innovation Hub.
Judges selected Alexia Price-O’Neal and her company,
Body Party, as the recipient of the $10,000 grand prize to support
her business’ expansion.
Kevin Ricco, director of the Hub, said he and his team
had been thinking about coordinating a program for the past several
years. Thanks to the Small Business Support Hub grant from the
Michigan Economic Development Corporation, Ricco and his team had
the necessary funding to invite members to its initial cohort.
For its first cohort, the ElevateWest Accelerator
program focused on minority and women-owned small businesses.
Eighteen small business owners began the program in early September
with 17 presenting their final pitches before an audience of more
than 140 people.
“ElevateWest Accelerator walks entrepreneurs through
various components of starting a small business — customer
discovery, understanding finances, pricing, profit — all of those
things are rolled into the curriculum.”
Along the way, the entrepreneurs met with the mentors,
heard from guest speakers and leaned on one another for support,
Ricco said.
“They bonded together over the last three months, and
they became really good friends who support one another,” Ricco
said. “You could feel that energy in the room.
“They created this network and bond that I think will
just continue carrying forward. It was a very supportive atmosphere.”
Other award recipients included:
Second place: Marisol Garcia-Linstrom, MariSOL
Solutions Co., $5,000
Third place: Angelita Valdez, Las Amigas Tequila, $2,500
City Choice: Nicole Love, Just Us Divine Health, $1,000
In a show of support for the event, Ricco said, the
city of Muskegon offered a City Choice $1,000 prize to the small
business located within a five-mile radius of the city.
“That was very supportive of the city for what we're
doing and for the entrepreneurs in the city,” Ricco said. “That was
an important gesture from the city of Muskegon.”