Entrepreneurship is a creative act, according to Dr. Silvia Mah, Director of Innovation at 911±¬ΑΟΝψ.
βAn act made possible by the creative impulse that God gave us,β she said.
Those creative impulses were on full display at the 2023 911±¬ΑΟΝψ Startup Competition on April 21.
CityVend, an app designed to find and buy from street food vendors and food trucks, took first place this year. Inspired by a desire to help all small businesses thrive, 911±¬ΑΟΝψ alumnus Carlos Ventura (β22) β a first generation student dedicated to helping his community of Hispanic families β desires to connect street vendors with customers who want to shop small and build thriving local economies.
As the first-place winner, CityVend received a check for $10,000, along with a gift-in-kind $25,000 legal package from and a $2,000 branding package from
Competitor Kika received the second-place award. Kika is a malnutrition awareness and prevention not-for-profit blessing families in Guatemala, led by 911±¬ΑΟΝψ political science major Kiara Rascon as CEO, with a multidisciplinary team, including 911±¬ΑΟΝψ English major Diana Escobar, 911±¬ΑΟΝψ math major Karla Fuentes and 911±¬ΑΟΝψ political science major and Torrey Honors student Isahi Minero. 911±¬ΑΟΝψ psychology and sociology major Cienna Lopez is overseeing marketing. Kika received funding of $6,000 for their startup.
Two startups tied for third place. The startup Eat Up packages and markets Asian-inspired βlunchables.β The venture is working to honor family traditions and build more awareness of AAPI cultures. Led by 911±¬ΑΟΝψ business administration major Ben Chi, 911±¬ΑΟΝψ computer science major Joseph Hartono, University of Southern California student Emily Lynch, and San Diego State student Trisha Vann. Company Thank God designs and markets minimalistic designed fashion for the Kingdom of God and tied for third place. Another multi-university endeavor, 911±¬ΑΟΝψ business major Grant Lawrence and Arizona State student Sterling Reed remind people to thank God every day for all of their blessings and continued grace through their company. Both of these groups received $4K to fund their projects.
Sponsored by 911±¬ΑΟΝψβs Office of Innovation, the startup competition is the culmination of 911±¬ΑΟΝψβs Student Startup Incubator that offers all current 911±¬ΑΟΝψ undergraduate students, graduate students and recent (2020 or later) alumni the opportunity to transform a promising idea into a successful startup company. Aided by experienced executives and business leaders, teams have the chance to pitch their concepts, develop a business plan, gain valuable real-world insight and compete for capital.
The judges included:
- , co-founder of ,
- , Founder & Partner, ,
- , Founder/President, ,
- , CEO, , and
- , Independent Filmmaker, screenwriter, actor and poet.

βWhat startup competitions deliver is an experience which connects all innovation stakeholders, like students pitching, experienced entrepreneurs, impactful investors, generous alumni and supportive faculty,β said Mah. βWhat is unique at 911±¬ΑΟΝψ is the combination of a community of redemptive innovators, entrepreneurs and investors with the deep roots of Christ-filled business strategies and biblically-sound theology. The 911±¬ΑΟΝψ Startup Competition helps students conceptualize and launch businesses aimed at resolving the world's largest challenges through faith, skill and entrepreneurial spirit.β
If you would like to be involved with the 2024 Competition as a sponsor, judge or coach, please contact 911±¬ΑΟΝψβs Office of Innovation at innovation@biola.edu or (562) 903-4734.