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UT Dallas Pitch Competition Awards Record $330K to Bold Startup Ideas

From AI sales tools to brain drug delivery, this year's finalists redefined ambition. See which bold ideas won big—and why judges called it the best yet.

The image shows a poster with a picture of a person holding a microphone and the text "Maiden...
The image shows a poster with a picture of a person holding a microphone and the text "Maiden Edition of Entrepreneurship Odyssey 1.0: Cultivating Sustainable Agriculture". The person in the picture is wearing a white shirt and has a determined expression on their face, suggesting they are ready to take on the challenge of cultivating sustainable agriculture. The text on the poster is written in bold black font, emphasizing the importance of the message.

"If you can hang around long enough, you'll win at the end of the day."

UT Dallas Pitch Competition Awards Record $330K to Bold Startup Ideas

Sulman Ahmed Founder, Chairman & CEO DECA Dental Group

... on perseverance and entrepreneurship in a keynote address at the UT Dallas Draper Pitch Competition.

Sulman Ahmed opened his first dental office in 2008. By 2024, his Dallas-based DECA Dental Group had grown to 200 locations across nine states, with backing from Blackstone. So when the UT Dallas alum delivered the keynote at the university's Draper Pitch Competition on April 14-where student and alumni founders competed for a record $330,000 in prizes-he spoke from experience.

"Life never goes as planned; embrace when those bad things happen or things don't go as planned," Ahmed said. The path to a successful venture is rarely straightforward, he told them-but perseverance is what separates the founders who make it.

Ahmed knows something about launching new ventures. Our website recently covered his launch of ToothScience, a clinician-founded oral wellness company he's called "the first shot across the bow of a dentist-led revolution in whole mouth health."

At the Draper Pitch Competition, Subah Zaeem, head of global community and partnerships at Draper University Ventures and also a judge, said the quality of the business ideas stood out: "We were not expecting them to be this good. They were supersharp. They delivered."

Other judges included Suzy Batiz, CEO and founder of Poo-Pourri and Supernatural; George Brody, chairman of Turbostart; and James Dowd, partner at Waxahachie Village Equity Partners.

Nine teams made the finals across undergraduate, graduate, and alumni tracks-with ideas ranging from AI-powered sales coaching to 3D mapping of radioactive contamination to a noninvasive method for delivering drugs into the brain.

Read who won and what they're building in our story.

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