U of T Entrepreneurship Week 2023: Top 10 startups to watch
A plant-based alternative to conventional plastic. Using drones to tackle reforestation in wildfire-ravaged locations. And a new generation of self-driving technologies that leverage the full potential of artificial intelligence.
These are just some innovative ideas that have emerged from the University of Toronto鈥檚 entrepreneurship community in recent years.
Ranked one of the top five university business incubators in the world, U of T Entrepreneurship is set to celebrate these and other startups, as well as their founders, during its annual from March 6 to 9. The schedule includes pitch competitions, workshops, panel discussions and the popular , which will feature the founders of more than 40 of U of T鈥檚 top startups.
Another highlight: Raquel Urtasun, founder and CEO of Waabi and a U of T professor of computer science, will discuss lessons learned while building her self-driving vehicle company at the on March 9.
Here are 10 exciting U of T startups to keep an eye on in 2023:
The ability to give patients agency over their own health monitoring was one of the reasons Surath Gomis co-founded Arma Biosciences. The startup鈥檚 goal is to develop a new sensor technology for biomarker-informed digital health care. In partnership with Analog Devices, work on the company鈥檚 first product is underway 鈥 a handheld finger-prick blood test for patients with heart failure.
With a PhD in electrical and computer engineering from U of T, Gomis established the company in 2020 with his supervisor Shana Kelley, a researcher in U of T鈥檚 Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy and Temerty Faculty of Medicine.
Gomis hopes future products will include wearable, implantable and ingestible sensors for monitoring applications.
U of T alumnae Nuha Siddiqui and Kritika Tyagi are working to transform the plastic industry for the better. In 2018, the pair co-founded Erthos, a company that offers fully biodegradable plant-based material as a replacement for single-use plastics.
Erthos creates resins using materials that are both compostable and microplastic-free 鈥 and compatible with existing manufacturing technology. Siddiqui and Tyagi recently made the Forbes , which noted that Erthos has raised more than US$5.5 million in funding.
Ali Zaheer and Zain Zaidi co-founded TransCrypts to transform digital privacy and security. Back in 2020, they set out to answer a simple question: 鈥淲hy can鈥檛 consumers own their important documentation digitally and in a way that can be easily verified?鈥
TransCrypts 鈥 which took home a startup prize at a U of T pitch competition during last year鈥檚 Entrepreneurship Week 鈥 is a blockchain-based document verification platform that gives people direct access to their official documents, such as medical records. Supported by U of T Scarborough鈥檚 , Zaheer and Zaidi have already helped thousands of Ukrainian refugees access medical records through a pilot project and landed US$2.4 million in funding from backers including Shark Tank investor Mark Cuban.
A world-leading expert in machine learning and computer vision, Raquel Urtasun was inspired to start Waabi when she recognized a need for a new generation of self-driving technologies that leverage AI鈥檚 full potential. Backed by high-profile investors, including Volvo and Uber, the company is leading the way when it comes to the next generation of self-driving solutions.
The company recently launched Waabi World, an advanced simulator to test its autonomous vehicles, and Waabi Driver, its first generation of self-driving trucks. Urtasun says she focused on the long-haul trucking sector because it鈥檚 one of the most dangerous occupations 鈥 not to mention an industry that suffers from a shortage of drivers.
Husband-and-wife co-founders La Vance and Colleen Dotson 鈥 head coach of the U of T Track & Field Club 鈥 are the entrepreneurial force behind a slick dating app for people already in relationships.
WooYourBoo aims to help partners reconnect and better communicate with each other through quizzes, activities and rewards.
鈥淥ur goal is to create depth and help you reconnect with this person that you鈥檝e committed to 鈥 and make it fun,鈥 Colleen recently told U of T News.
The Dotsons say that U of T鈥檚 was instrumental in building WooYourBoo, which was among the inaugural cohort of the BFN Accelerate Program.
OTI Lumionics could change the look of the smartphone in your pocket.
Founded by U of T alumnus Michael Helander, the company has been working on expanding its line of organic LED technology solutions 鈥 including smartphone screens that are uninterrupted by notches, which are currently needed to house front-facing cameras and other equipment in some smartphone designs.
The company, which was spun out of research at U of T, has and, most recently, as a key supplier for a future notch-free iPhone.
Flash Forest, a startup with ties to U of T Mississauga, is fighting climate change and restoring forests by leveraging the use of drones, AI, geographic information systems and plant science technology.
The company 鈥 which received support from U of T鈥檚 Mississauga鈥檚 ICUBE incubator 鈥 recently inked a federal contract to use drones to plant more than one million trees over the next two years in wildfire-ravaged locations across Canada.
The co-founders, brothers Bryce and Cameron Jones, say they are focused on restoring severe wildfire sites where the seed pods and cones are lost.
Signal 1 is looking to transform health care by equipping doctors and nurses with real-time AI predictions.
The company, co-founded by CEO Tomi Poutanen, a U of T alumnus, and Mara Lederman, professor of strategic management at the Rotman School of Management, has built a machine learning tool called CHARTWatch that can help predict how much support a patient will need.
The tool was originally developed at St. Michael鈥檚 Hospital by a team led by Signal 1's clinical adviser Muhammad Mamdani, who is vice-president of data science and advanced analytics at Unity Health Toronto and holds cross-appointments at U of T鈥檚 Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, Temerty Faculty of Medicine and Dalla Lana School of Public Health.
The surgical unit at St. Michael鈥檚 Hospital to help care teams communicate and make decisions.
When U of T Scarborough alumna Iman Mounib encountered gut health issues, she took it upon herself to create products that are free of refined sugars, palm oils, gluten and dairy.
She founded Mounib Real Food Only, which sells a chocolate hazelnut spread made of just three local ingredients. The company also makes a peanut chocolate spread, as well as an almond chocolate version. Mounib鈥檚 goal was to create alternatives to popular products that are both tasty and good for you.
The products are sold in almost 20 restaurants, cafes and stores in the Greater Toronto Area, as well as one location in Ottawa.
HippoCamera is a smartphone application that helps to improve memory recall, which could be beneficial for individuals in the early stages of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease or other forms of memory impairment.
Backed by years of research at U of T, the app has an easy-to-use interface and is a personalized way to boost recall of daily experiences and enhance activity in the hippocampus, a part of the brain that plays a key role in memory.
Morgan Barense, a professor in the department of psychology in the Faculty of Arts & Science and co-author of a recent study on the technology, said her team found that memories that were associated with the HippoCamera were long-lasting 鈥 and that the device worked for both healthy older adults and those starting to show cognitive decline.