Two startups, one pioneering burn care for patients and the other educating teens about menstruation, were picked as the winners at a recent social impact pitch event at Cambridge Innovation Center (CIC). 

Prior to the public pitch night, where the audience cast vote for their favorite presentations, the entrepreneurs had pitched to a panel of judges, whose choice was also announced at the event hosted by Venture Cafe June 25. The judges picked SilkMed, which is creating a spray on silk dressing for burns, while the audience picked MyCycleIQ, an app to manage around menstrual cycles.

Reducing pain for burn patients

Silkmed grew out of Sebastian Useche’s pursuit of a master’s degree in Innovation and Management at Tufts. The program encourages students to find a problem and create a business plan around how to solve it. Useche had shadowed the medical director at Brigham & Womenโ€™s Hospitals burn clinic and observed patients of all ages โ€œcrying, shaking in painโ€ during the process of recovery.ย 

SilkMed CEO Sebastian Useche (left) and cofounder and CTO Zachary DiMuccio. Credit: Courtesy of Sebastian Useche

โ€œIt seemed worse than the actual accident,โ€ Useche said. โ€œThatโ€™s something that stuck with me.โ€

Useche met David Kaplan, a Tufts professor who studies biopolymer engineering, and was fascinated by his work. He quickly realized that it could be used to help burn patients by lessening the pain associated with removing dressings, which can adhere to the wound. Kaplan’s technology underpinning SilkMed, which incorporated July 3, 2024. 

One audience member who voted for it was Adrianna Gugel, an applicant for the next early growth stage cohort at CIC. โ€œTheyโ€™re building a better mousetrap for burn patient care, and I think thatโ€™s awesome,โ€ Gugel said. 

Changing the period cycle

MyCycleIQ founder Samanda Jean, who was the audienceโ€™s pick. Jean has been cycle syncing, the process of aligning your workout, diet and lifestyle with your menstrual cycle, for over six years. To understand her health, she had been using her FitBit to make sure she was pushing herself properly each day.ย 

However, she noticed that around her luteal phase, the second half of the menstrual cycle that spans from ovulation to the first day of the period, sheโ€™d get depressed and tired. Her FitBit didnโ€™t account for this when it gave her an overview of what her workouts should look like for the day. So, she started developing an app.

Samanda Jean, center, is founder of MyCycleIQ, an app that help women manage their menstrual cycles. Samantha Garcia, right, is Cambridge Innovation Center’s social Impact program coordinator, Colleen Kwedor, its senior program manager for the social Impact program. Credit: Cambridge Innovation Center

At first, the app was designed as a supplement to things like FitBit. However, as she went through the early growth stage of the social impact program, she decided that the app needed to pivot to a different mission. 

She saw the effects the lack of menstrual health education can have on someone. So, she decided to focus her app on teenagers and prioritizing their understanding of their menstrual health. 

The app gives teens a way to log their periods and understand their cycle and the symptoms that come with it. 

Accelerating through obstacles 

This year marked Cambridge Innovation Centerโ€™s fifth social impact cohort, fledgling companies run by historically disadvantaged entrepreneurs within Massachusetts. The entrepreneurs can go through two distinct programs,early growth stage, a three-month program where companies have a product and are working to gain customers, and the other a six-month growth stage, where companies with customers work to expand their operations. Startups from the early growth pool often continue to the six-month growth stage. 

Useche, 28, is originally from Ecuador and moved to the Boston area when he was 16. He said he has appreciated the areaโ€™s diversity and inclusiveness, but applied for the CIC program because he had faced challenges, such as visa compliance, as an entrepreneur from an underrepresented demographic. He said the program had helped him build a network that eased his problems hiring a team at SilkMed. 

He also said being in a community with other early-stage entrepreneurs had helped him through challenges company founders face. โ€œPeople truly like to be there for each other and help as much as they can,โ€ Useche said.

He said after he received the judgeโ€™s pick award he hung the plaque at his home office. It helps remind him of the work he and his team have invested. โ€œSometimes you feel like you don’t do enough as an entrepreneur,โ€ Useche said. โ€œBut having these little wins and learning to appreciate them for what they’re worth is something that I’m working on.โ€

SilkMed CEO Sebastian Useche (left) and cofounder and CTO Zachary DiMuccio. Credit: Courtesy of Sebastian Useche

He hopes to use the awardโ€™s stipend to help develop the companyโ€™s new prototype. 

MyCycleIQ founder Samanda Jean applied to the program after the recommendation from her mentor, Sheila Phicil, who had been part of the program and founded Phicil-itate Change, which helps create health tech for patient care. 

Jean, who joined the early stage cohort, said her biggest challenges as a solo founder are managing the startup in the face of the everyday stresses of life. She said receiving the award shocked her. But it also now motivates her. 

โ€œTo try and run something solo that Iโ€™m super passionate about comes with ups and downs,โ€ Jean said. โ€œThis was definitely one of the ups thatโ€™s probably going to push me for the next year or so.โ€

The stipend she received will go toward treating her summer interns to dinner. Jean hopes to have a minimum viable product, the simplest version of a product that allows a company to receive feedback, by this fall. 

Also in this yearโ€™s cohort were Bevy Studios, Collixion Therapeutics, Dri Umbrellas, FitKind, Health for Mankind Company, Kidogo Productions, Menty Corp, ProctR Technologies, and SickPayy. 

The night started off with a panel with speakers from the Urban League of Eastern Massachusetts, including Dele Omotosho, workforce development instructor; Dr. Shakenna Williams, the executive director of Frank and Aileen Center for Womenโ€™s Entrepreneurial Leadership; and Rahsaan Hall, the president and CEO of Urban League Massachusetts. They discussed barriers faced by entrepreneurs in underrepresented groups and how to overcome them. Then, the cohort was brought up to give a three-minute pitch about their startups.

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