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Business boot camp helps Marietta student bring her sweet dream to life

Lilly Franchino had a sweet tooth and an idea. The Marietta College junior was helping plan her sister鈥檚 birthday party and wanted to hire someone to come and dish out soft-serve ice cream (a family favorite).

Despite searching all over Southeast 帝王会所, Franchino came up empty. Sensing an opportunity, she began sketching ideas for her own business. A contact tipped her off to a start-up contest, Ignite Appalachia, run by 帝王会所鈥檚 George Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Service in partnership with the Columbus-based

Ignite Appalachia was a boot camp of eight two-hour sessions over three months where Franchino and her classmates learned the nuts and bolts of becoming a successful entrepreneur.

鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 the most exciting stuff, but it was crucial to have a strong base for your business,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 had really good conversations with people in the same boat as me and others who were more than willing to put time and effort into my business.鈥

One of the mentors was the Voinovich School鈥檚 Nathaniel Berger. He helped lead the boot camp, tapping into his experience leading Voinovich entrepreneur efforts and corralling small business owners across Washington County to share their stories.

鈥淲e took them from nothing to something,鈥 says Berger. 鈥淲e ensured that their idea had traction and market validity, teaching them the skills to do those things and then helping them set up and prepare for the pitch competition.鈥

The competition was the capstone to the boot camp, and Franchino鈥檚 idea was the top vote-getter. The money awarded helped her launch Swirled, a portable soft-serve ice cream cart that can be reserved by event planners and caterers for a set number of people or serve as a more traditional on-demand food truck. She spent $1,200 on her ice cream machine, which churns out vanilla, chocolate, or a swirl of the two together.

And while the 2024 boot camp has concluded, the Voinovich School and the ECDI resources are still available for participants to tap into.

Berger has connected Franchino with OHIO鈥檚 School of Art + Design in the Chaddock + Morrow College of Fine Arts to help her design her logo and website. Participants also have access to other resources in the ECDI ecosystem.

鈥淲e don't abandon them because just because they won a competition,鈥 says Berger. 鈥淲e want them to be successful in the long term.鈥 

Published
October 15, 2024
Author
Matt Hendrickson