Entrepreneurs came from as far as Ghana and Mexico to Durham last week to gather with a cohort of eight early-stage North Carolina startups for intense training, mentorship and business development from The Startup Factory (TSF).

Over the course of three days, TSF’s Lizzy Hazeltine, Chris Heivly, and Dave Neal led 17 startup founders through a rigorous bootcamp based on “lean canvas” theories. It was the third such bootcamp held in North Carolina in the last nine months, and an effort The Startup Factory plans to continue.

The goal is two-fold. First, TSF hopes to impart knowledge and expertise to North Carolina startups at an earlier stage than those that traditionally went through its accelerator program—the aim is to help new founders increase customer traction and better understand their markets earlier in their startup journey. TSF also hopes to broaden its reach and network to both create a stronger pipeline of new startups and add to the state’s startup ecosystem.

Or as Hazeltine puts it, “we’ve seen an opportunity in these companies—if we get a hold of these companies sooner, then they can build better, faster, more, and we have a relationship with them and have armed them with some tools.”

Free of charge, the Durham bootcamp was popular enough it attracted what Hazeltine calls “a healthy applicant pool” of startups, more than TSF was able to enroll.

Bootcamper Renán Ugalde traveled from Mexico to join his cofounder Ivan Barajas Vargasof UGetDeal—an online marketplace that matches grocery stores with unsold perishable goods with buyers. The bootcamp is designed for early-stage ventures like UGetDeal that are at the beginning stage of acquiring customers. But the definition of “early stage” among the bootcamp companies ranged from ideation to significant market traction. Riivet, for example, had over $600,000 in revenue last year. But regardless of stage, the bootcamp helps startups make a lot of progress over the next 30 to 60 days.

The previous two bootcamps were held in Winston-Salem and Greensboro last August and December. While the core of curriculum remains the same as when we first reported on it last fall, the TSF team has tweaked and improved the structure and content after each bootcamp.

For the full story, see:

http://exitevent.com/article/the-startup-factory-durham-bootcamp-160324