Business students win big with plans to combat “brain drain”

New Orleans experienced an unprecedented influx of young professionals in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, but the challenge now, civic leaders say, is how to keep these talented 20- and 30-somethings in New Orleans. MBA student Ishaneka Williams came up with one idea to help accomplish that goal, and earned a $200,000 prize package for her effort.

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Ishaneka Williams (MBA '10) and Will Donaldson (MBA '09), below, were the big winners in the 504ward Business Competition

Williams (MBA ’10) was the grand prize winner in the 504ward Business Competition, which challenged entrepreneurs to develop business proposals to retain and engage 23-to-35-year-olds in New Orleans. The competition, which was sponsored by the Idea Village and 504ward, a local collaborative effort aimed at retaining the city’s young professionals, offered the winning venture $100,000 in startup cash and $100,000 worth of business services and resources.

Williams and partner Lavonzell Nicholson earned that prize for Play NOLA, a recreational sports league that will combine activities like volleyball, basketball and kickball with social networking opportunities for young professionals.

“We were thinking what would draw us to cities, and we kept coming back to social connectivity and quality of life,” explains Williams. “Play NOLA allows us to encompass social connectivity and quality of life under the umbrella of economic development through networking. We want to provide networking opportunities to young professionals through sports leagues and specialized events.”

According to Williams, Play NOLA is modeled after similar programs in cities like San Diego, Washington, D.C., and Chicago, home of Chicago Sports and Social Club, one of the largest such organizations. Like Chicago Sports and Social Club, Play NOLA plans to generate revenues through fees charged to league participants and corporate sponsorships.

Williams emphasizes that Play NOLA will feature more than just athletic events. Among the special events planned for its launch this fall are a scavenger hunt and a “lock-and-key” networking party, in which attendees are asked to find the person in attendance whose lock matches his or her key.

“We want to give people more of an experience,” says Williams. “It’s not just to come out and play kickball or something like that. We’ll have snowball stands and jazz music to create an atmosphere not only for those who want to play, but for those who want to look on and cheer as well.”

Williams wasn’t the only Tulane MBA to shine in the competition. Three of the five business proposals selected as finalists were submitted by current Tulane MBA students and a fourth was submitted by a pair of 2008 graduates. Will Donaldson (MBA ’09) so impressed 504ward organizer Leslie Jacobs with his plan to provide affordable office space to entrepreneurs that she created a second-place prize of $25,000 just for his proposal.

“We’re trying to make a place that will nurture entrepreneurs,” Donaldson says of Launch Pad, which offers affordable office space in the Intellectual Property building on Magazine Street, whose cutting-edge tenants include the Idea Village, iSeatz.com, TurboSquid and Carrollton Technology Partners. “When you’re working out of your bedroom, you don’t get that community, you don’t get that culture of entrepreneurship you need that fosters a real business.”

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John Elstrott isn’t surprised that Tulane MBAs dominated the competition. Social entrepreneurship—creating businesses with a social purpose beyond profits—has become a strength of the Freeman School in recent years, and a growing number of students are interested in creating and working for businesses that meet significant social needs. “I think we’re attracting that kind of student to Tulane in general,” says Elstrott, executive director of the Levy-Rosenblum Institute for Entrepreneurship. “They see business not only as a way to fill a need and make a profit but as a way to address an environmental or social issue. It’s something we’re trying to work more into the curriculum, and it’s something our faculty have a strong interest in.”

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