Halifax to Host Business Model Contest

Ed Leach talks about the upcoming Canada’s Business Model Competition by comparing it to the situation that used to exist in Canadian college basketball – the championships were in Halifax every year.

Dalhousie University – at which Leach teaches entrepreneurship – announced Thursday that its Rowe School of Business will hold the competition for student entrepreneurs on March 9. The winner will take home half of $30,000 in prizes, and then attend the International Business Model Competition at Harvard University May 3 and 4.

What’s significant is that it is the only Canadian venue for

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FAN Defends its Funding Model

As I ended a conversation Tuesday with an entrepreneur who was once funded by the First Angel Network, he said, “The worst thing that could come out of this would be for FAN to shut down.”

This is the controversy that erupted Tuesday when David Crow of StartUp North published a blog criticizing the Halifax angel network for charging entrepreneurs to pitch and taking money from the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Network.

Crow believes strongly that entrepreneurs should not pay to pitch investors. His main complaints – highlighted by boldfaced expletives – are that entrepreneurs pay FAN

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RtTech Penetrating Global Markets

The fact that RtTech Software CEO Pablo Asiron has travelled this year to Kazakhstan, Australia and the Philippines to meet clients and sales prospects shows how successful the New Brunswick company has been in international markets.

Only 16 months old, RtTech of Riverview has developed software that helps companies become more efficient with energy and their machinery. Last May, it raised $750,000 in equity investment from the New Brunswick Innovation Foundation and a group of individual investors.

Since then, the company has expanded its sales and now has 40 clients in 11 countries.

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Creative Funding by Biotechs

Charlottetown-based drug-discovery company Neurodyn Inc. tapped an unlikely source of capital when it announced its $1.5-million to $2-million funding round last week. It raised money from something called a “home office.” It also revealed a new trend among Atlantic Canadian biotech companies.

Regional biotechs are becoming creative in their fundraising and seeking sources beyond venture capital firms and Canadian angels. Because of the philanthropic nature of biotech, they’re able to find money from charitable foundations, family funds, and wealthy people in emerging markets.

This

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ViewPoint Strategy Targets Brokerage

ViewPoint Realty Services, a Bedford,N.S.,-based online property data and brokerage site, is reviewing its strategy with the goal of leveraging its highly successful website to draw more customers to its brokerage business.

ViewPoint is best known for its interactive online map, from which consumers can draw massive amounts of free information about the real estate market — what properties are for sale or have sold, asking and selling prices and assessments, to name a few. The business model relies on brokerage and advertising revenue.

 “A significant portion of our users see us as a

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SMU to Launch MTEI Program

Sitting in a coffee shop on the St. Mary’s University campus, Dawn Jutla is almost dwarfed by the stack of pamphlets promoting the new program she is launching – the Master’s of Technology Entrepreneurship and Innovation.

The MTEI program at the Sobey School of Business is an accelerated graduate program that teaches people within organizations or those intent on starting their own businesses how to improve productivity through technical innovation. The program will admit 50 students when it launches in September, and will be the first of its kind in Atlantic Canada and only the third in

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NSBI Sinks $1.5M in Health Outcomes

Strengthening its finances and team, Cape Breton healthcare administration company Health Outcomes Worldwide has landed $1.5 million in follow-on funding from Nova Scotia Business Inc. weeks after it hired Ted Maclean as Chief Executive Officer.

The company, which received $250,000 in funding from Innovacorp in 2011, will use the new funding to roll-out of the next version of its How2Trak healthcare outcomes measurement software, as well as other products.

Founded by original CEO Corrine McIsaac, Health Outcomes helps healthcare providers improve their service for patients while

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SMU’s Davison Developing DressEase

Becky Davison sees a massive market for her line of clothes for people with arthritis, and she is now trying to execute a strategy for selling it to consumers.

The MBA student at Saint Mary’s University is the CEO of DressEase, an adaptive apparel company whose clothes fasten with magnets, so rheumatoid arthritis sufferers can dress and undress with ease. 

Having designed the clothes and settled on a business strategy, Davison is now seeking $400,000 in capital to fund a direct sales distribution network with 10 locations in the U.S. and Canada. 

Existing products have Velcro

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Neurodyn Lands $1.5M; May Add $500K

Neurodyn Inc., the Charlottetown biotech developing early treatments for neurological diseases, has closed a $1.5-million round of funding from a range of U.S. and Canadian investors and could bump the total up to $2 million.

The company will use the money to push forward with its two top candidates: NeuroPro, a dietary supplement for early-stage Parkinson’s disease, which will begin sales in Canada this year; and Progranulin, a novel therapeutic compound being developed as a treatment for ALS, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases.

The headline investors in the round were the Regis

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Alpha Dog Games Seeks $1 Million

Now that its first mobile game Wraithborne has been downloaded by 200,000 users, Alpha Dog Games is looking for as much as $1 million to help develop its next game.

The Bedford, N.S., game developer launched Wraithborne for mobile devices running on iOS (Apple’s operating system) in November, having developed the action-adventure game with only a three-man team in about six months. Focusing on the quality of the graphics and storyline, they created a low-budget game that generated enough buzz to keep going to work on the sequel.

“Real success would be 1 million downloads, but some games

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