Alumni Share How Program Provided Launchpad for Business Ventures

A man in a checkered blazer speaks to an audience from a glass podium in front of big letters that say 10 Years Image by Meghan Moore
Alumnus Brian Rist '77 talks about why he and his wife are proud to support UML's Rist DifferenceMaker Institute, which recently celebrated its 10th anniversary.

10/18/2021
By Ed Brennen

Rajia Abdelaziz ’16 remembers shaking as she nervously took the University Crossing stage to pitch her team’s wearable personal safety device to judges at the 2016 DifferenceMaker Idea Challenge.

Five years later, Abdelaziz was filled with gratitude as she took the stage for the Rist DifferenceMaker Institute’s 10th anniversary celebration at Moloney Hall.

“I would not be standing here if it wasn’t for DifferenceMaker,” said Abdelaziz, whose collaboration with electrical engineering alumni Ray Hamilton ’17 has turned into one of DifferenceMaker’s biggest success stories: invisaWear, a smart jewelry and accessory company that eclipsed $1 million in sales in its first year on the market and recently partnered with home security leader ADT.

Dozens of DifferenceMaker alumni from the past decade recently joined judges, mentors and sponsors to celebrate the success of the campus-wide program, which engages students in creative problem solving, innovation and entrepreneurship and culminates in team pitch competitions.

“Real-world experience solving real-world problems — that’s what our faculty and students do, and that’s why DifferenceMaker was a no-brainer for us,” said Chancellor Jacquie Moloney, who, as executive vice chancellor in 2011 worked with Steven Tello, now vice provost for graduate and professional studies, to build the program.

“We said from the beginning, DifferenceMaker is not a business plan competition,” Tello said. “We want to raise awareness, seed ideas, move people forward, help them develop skills and help them launch businesses. And that we’ve done.”

A man in a blue blazer speaks from a glass podium Image by Meghan Moore
Jonathan Perez de Alderete '13, who co-founded Nonspec after winning the inaugural DifferenceMaker competition in 2013, shares his business journey at the anniversary celebration.

So far, 40 companies have been formed from DifferenceMaker student ventures, attracting $5 million in funding and generating over $4 million in revenue.

One of the first was Nonspec, a company that makes affordable and adjustable prosthetic limb kits. It won the first Campus Wide DifferenceMaker contest — and a $5,000 top prize — in 2013.

“We’re kind of the older sibling of the DifferenceMaker family,” said Jonathan Perez de Alderete ’13, who co-founded Nonspec with Erin Keaney ’14, ’17.

They’ve raised over $2.5 million and provided customizable prosthetic limbs to thousands of patients in India, Rwanda and Laos. De Alderete said they’ll be releasing their first products in the U.S. in the next six months.

“That support structure of DifferenceMaker is huge when building your company,” he said.

Tyler Cote ’18, co-founder and director of Operation250, a nonprofit that educates children, parents and teachers about online safety, agreed.

While the $6,000 prize for winning the 2017 Campus Wide DifferenceMaker contest was “great,” Cote said the program’s business lessons along the way were a “game-changer” for someone who double-majored in political science and criminal justice.

A smiling man stands between two women while holding a glass plaque. Image by Meghan Moore
Vice Provost for Graduate and Professional Studies Steven Tello is presented with a gift from Chancellor Jacquie Moloney, left, and DifferenceMaker Director Holly Lalos during the anniversary celebration.

“We came into DifferenceMaker with a class project mentality; we left with a business mentality,” said Cote, whose organization has already reached over 2,000 people in Massachusetts.

While 136 DifferenceMaker teams have won more than $525,000 in prize money over the past decade — either in first-round, college-based competitions or in the year-ending $50K Idea Challenge — even those that don’t take home a top prize have gone on to success.

Ambulatory Innovations, a mat system that simulates walking outdoors for physical therapy patients, received an honorable mention at the 2019 Idea Challenge. With support and encouragement from DifferenceMaker Director Holly Lalos, company co-founders Michelle Mailloux ’17, ’20 and Katie Muise ’17, ’20 have gone on to win several other startup competitions, including the Beantown Throwdown, where they beat out teams from Harvard and host MIT.

“DifferenceMaker has empowered us by providing an opportunity to engage our clinical mindset in a business setting,” Muise said. “We are so excited to continue to grow with them.”

Manning School of Business alumnus Brian Rist ’77 first became involved with DifferenceMaker as a volunteer judge seven years ago. He and his wife, Kim, made a $5 million gift to UML in 2019, when the program was renamed the Rist DifferenceMaker Institute.

“When I look back at not just the winners, but all the participants we’ve met over the years, I feel truly blessed to have witnessed so many noble and worthy participants,” said Rist, founder of Florida-based Storm Smart, the country’s largest manufacturer and installer of hurricane protection systems. Rist sold the company last year and created the Rist Family Foundation to focus on charitable endeavors.

A woman with long dark hair speaks to an audience from a glass podium Image by Meghan Moore
DifferenceMaker alumna Rajia Abdelaziz '16 talks about the hypergrowth of her company, invisaWear, since winning the $50K Idea Challenge in 2016.

“Of all the wonderful and worthy causes that we support, this is truly the one that’s nearest and dearest in our hearts and thoughts,” Rist told the audience.

Abdelaziz, who double-majored in electrical engineering and computer science, recalled turning down a job at Google so she and Hamilton could focus on invisaWear, which received $4,500 for winning the Idea Challenge’s Innovative Technology Solution category in 2016.

“That initial money allowed us to build prototypes that we then took to investors to raise additional funding,” said Abdelaziz, who thanked Lalos for connecting her team with the Lowell Development and Financial Corporation for their first loan.

Abdelaziz hinted that more big news was coming soon for invisaWear.

“I can’t wait to tell you guys more about that at our next celebration,” she said.