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Entrepreneurial Fellowship Winner Targets Mobile Meme Market

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David 淣ico Lopez 21 is developing a game-like platform dedicated to creating and sharing memes.

Jan. 29, 2018

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. Nearly every weeknight at 10 p.m., David 淣ico Lopez 21 and his team of five fellow-糖心动漫vlog students take a break from their class studies to work on developing what they hope will become a functional, marketable and ultimately profitable mobile app called 淐aptionIt.

The winner of Illinois Wesleyan檚 $5,000 bi-annual Entrepreneurial Fellowship grant, Lopez is utilizing the money along with as many student and faculty resources as possible to grow his idea into a downloadable product for smartphones and mobile devices.

淚llinois Wesleyan is our team檚 main resource, said Lopez, who is a freshman computer science and physics double major. 淭he fellowship is a huge opportunity that they檝e given us.

A native of Ecuador, Lopez found inspiration for the 淐aptionIt app from his long-distance relationship.

淢y girlfriend is still in Ecuador, and we share these memes that we make of each other or of friends, Lopez said. Memes are digital photographs typically captioned with humorous text and shared on the Internet or via social media.

淢y girlfriend and I pair images that we take or screenshots, and we add funny text, and then we have a website where we submit all of the memes we create, Lopez continued. 淚t檚 a fun thing to do, and I asked myself, 業s there a mobile platform to do this?櫇

Lopez could not find an existing game-like platform dedicated to creating and sharing memes online. He then surveyed Illinois Wesleyan students to determine if a market for such a product exists.

淥ut of 200 students surveyed, 100 percent have seen a meme made about someone they know, Lopez said. 淎nd, 70 percent of students are actually creating them.

However, in most cases, users currently create personalized memes using a website or a social media platform, such as Snapchat.

Team
Lopez recruited fellow students to help with his startup project: Ania Bui 18, Ziyan Liu 19, Michael Modaff 19, Joi Stack 18 and Liuting Chen 18.

After identifying the opportunity, Lopez recruited a group of Illinois Wesleyan student computer programmers and graphic designers to help with the startup project. Team members include: Ania Bui 18, Liuting Chen 18, Ziyan Liu 19, Michael Modaff 19 and Joi Stack 18.

淐aptionIt which will be a free app with potential in-app purchases will not only provide a meme-creation and sharing platform, but it will also function as a mobile, social game similar in concept to the card games Apples to Apples and Cards Against Humanity.

Since receiving the Entrepreneurship Fellowship during the fall of 2017, Lopez and his team have been working more than 10 hours per week to develop 淐aptionIt. Along with their nightly work sessions during the week, they also meet in Ames Library each Sunday afternoon to communicate progress and strategize for the week ahead.

The programmers are developing 淐aptionIt with Google檚 database software, Firebase, and Apple檚 mobile platform, Swift. The graphic designers have created a beta logo and are working on the overall look of the app.

淲e have an incredible team, Lopez said. 淭hey檙e really smart, dedicated students who are all very resourceful. If they don檛 know something, they have the initiative to contact teachers. I think that檚 our main asset.

Money from the $5,000 Entrepreneurship Fellowship is being allocated to fund developer license fees and server expenses. Once 淐aptionIt is available for download, Lopez said he and his team will also invest in marketing and updating the app.

淚檝e learned a lot so far, Lopez said. 淚 feel like I檝e grown. This is one of the most interesting things I檝e ever done, because it檚 something that puts into practice everything I know. Obviously, it檚 testing my coding skills and learning skills, but I檓 also trying to be the best leader possible.

淚 really want this project to be successful.

Lopez is the fourth student to earn the Entrepreneurial Fellowship, which was established with funding support from alumnus Marc Talluto '94. Previous winners include Claudia Richman 19 for her lacrosse-themed apparel, Cameron Loyet 18 for his company Honey Moon Chocolates, and Tim Leiser 16 for developing an app to help nonprofits track volunteer hours.

Applications for the next round of funding for the Entrepreneurial Fellowship are due Feb. 26, 2018 and are available online: www.iwu.edu/business/entrepreneurial-fellowship.html.

By John Twork