TV

TV’s Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Hosts 14th Annual Pitch Day

VILLANOVA,Pa.(May 22, 2025)–On April 26, TV’s Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (IIE) hosted its 14th annual Pitch Day. Held each April, Pitch Day gives students from across the University the opportunity to showcase their entrepreneurial spirit by pitching an idea for a new business, from the ground up.

On Pitch Day, students took part in the final rounds of the Villanova Student Entrepreneurship Competition (VSEC). The Meyer Innovation Award was also presented.

“VSEC helps students move business from simple ideas into real motion,” said Ann Goody, the Daniel J. Hogarty, Jr. ’61 Director of the Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship. “Whether or not they win, every team walks away with mentorship, guidance and a jumpstart on building something real. This isn’t busy work—it’s the kind of groundwork every founder has to do to bring a venture to life.”

Information on this year’s events, as well as the day’s winners and awardees, can be found below:

Brett Mastrangelo Delivers Presentation on Adjustiblox.
Brett Mastrangelo won VSEC's first place prize for his adjustable yoga block Adjustiblox.

Villanova Student Entrepreneurship Competition

VESC is a semester-long, interdisciplinary entrepreneurship competition for Villanova student ventures, with cash awards granted to the top three winning teams. To enter the competition, teams created a business model canvas and a short elevator pitch video and were assigned two alumni coaches who helped to refine their pitch deck and practice their pitch. The top teams presented at Pitch Day to a room of experienced alumni entrepreneurs, who awarded over $20,000 in prizes and in-kind services to the best pitches and venture ideas. In addition, judges selected three teams to receive the Crowd Choice award, the Klinger Unitas Prize and the Halloran Social Impact Prize.

First Place ($10,000 Prize) –&Բ;ٴձ, Brett Mastrangelo, CWSL ’26

  • Adjustiblox is a rechargeable yoga block that allows users to adjust their yoga block's height at the push of a button.

Second Place ($5,000 Prize)  SIMPLY REAL FOOD, Cameron Compare, COE ’25

  • Simply Real Food is an e-grocer service aimed at delivering rigorously vetted, unprocessed and toxin-free groceries directly from farms to customers.

Third Place ($3,000 Prize)  BARBUZZ, Navi Singh, CLAS ’25; Ellie McLaughlin, CLAS ’25; Christina Alyskewycz, CLAS ‘25

  • BarBuzz is a platform that enables Villanova students to track which local establishments their friends are visiting.

Crowd Choice ($1,000 Prize)  WILDCAT ROOMIES, Amaya Raye, CLAS ’25; Shawn Golden, CLAS ’25; Cailin Cobey, CLAS ‘25

  • Wildcat Roomies is a web application designed to help TV alumni find compatible roommates in various cities across the nation.

Klinger Unitas Prize ($500 Prize) – GREEN UN-FREEZE, Kamil Aliyev, COE ’26; Rayan Magon, CLAS ’26; Isaac Bua, COE ‘26

  • Green Un-Freeze is an innovative, sustainable de-icing solution that combines traction and moisture control in one environmentally-conscious product.

Halloran Social Impact Prize ($500 Prize)  SIMPLY REAL FOOD, Cameron Compare, COE ’25

  • Simply Real Food is an e-grocer service aimed at delivering rigorously vetted, unprocessed and toxin-free groceries directly from farms to customers.

Kyle Lee Accepts Meyer Innovation Award
Senior Kyle Lee won the 2025 Meyer Innovation Award.

The Meyer Innovation Award

The Meyer Innovation Award was created and endowed in 2009 by Patrick Meyer ’74 VSB in honor of the Meyer family (Patrick ’74, Edward ’86, and C. Paul ’30) to recognize Villanova’s graduating seniors. Each year one graduating senior is awarded $5,000.

Winner – KYLE LEE ’25 CLAS

  • Lee has demonstrated a strong passion for innovation, drawing from his experience at a med-tech startup, his role as an investment fellow with the IIE Fund and most recently by developing an AI-generated newsletter for investors during the spring semester.

About TV: Since 1842, TV’s Augustinian Catholic intellectual tradition has been the cornerstone of an academic community in which students learn to think critically, act compassionately and succeed while serving others. There are more than 10,000 undergraduate, graduate and law students in the University's six colleges—the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Villanova School of Business, the College of Engineering, the M. Louise Fitzpatrick College of Nursing, the College of Professional Studies and the TV Charles Widger School of Law. Ranked among the nation’s top universities, Villanova supports its students’ intellectual growth and prepares them to become ethical leaders who create positive change everywhere life takes them. For more, visit .