The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Innovative CT products pitched at Hartford event

- By Liese Klein STAFF WRITER

Her potty prototype was on the hot seat, but Ming Hui was ready.

Judges peppered Hui with questions: How does her smart potty work with a phone app? How is she moving her potty toward production? How is it different from potty-training devices already on the market?

Hui explained that her Mobabbi smart potty was designed for infants as young as nine months, training them with sounds to go in the potty and skip the toddler diaper phase. The New Haven-based entreprene­ur wants to challenge the $80 billion diaper industry and allow parents to return to the age-old practice of early potty training.

“The competitiv­e landscape is ripe for disruptive innovation,” Hui said. “In addition to being a mother to a child, I also have a lot of business experience in finance strategy and operations. So I have what it takes to bring this product to the market.”

Hui and four other entreprene­urs gave their elevator pitches to a panel of judges Monday at an event by FORGE Connecticu­t in Hartford. All had hopes of winning a $20,000 first prize and making connection­s to move their products forward.

FORGE, a nonprofit startup booster based in Somerville, Massachuse­tts, hosted the event and funded the prizes as part of its launch in the state.

“We connect innovators with great Connecticu­t suppliers and manufactur­ers, and we’re a nonprofit, we’re here to work with all of you,” said FORGE Vice President Adam Rodrigues.

“FORGE is here to help innovators move from prototype to commercial­ization and scale production,” Executive Director Laura Teicher said. “We want to work with you if you’re an innovator with at least an early physical prototype, if you’re a regional manufactur­er or supplier eager to engage with innovative products.”

The big winner at Monday’s event was another potty-adjacent invention: The Toilet Lift Assist device created by UConn grad Jeremy Bronen and his partners.

The device fits on most toilets, uses gas springs for power and prevents injuries to both older adults and health care workers. The springs, similar to those on car trunks and screen doors, are designed to lift 80% of a user’s body weight.

“There are electric versions but we’re different and better,” Bronen said.

Bronen’s company, Woodbridge-based SedMed, has manufactur­ed 250 units of the Toilet Lift Assist after an $881,000 seed round led by Connecticu­t Innovation­s. The company said it hopes to use the $20,000 firstprize FORGE check for new product developmen­t, rapid prototypin­g and introducin­g a hybrid supply chain.

SedMed launched with help from startup programs through UConn’s Center for Entreprene­urship and Innovation Quest, and state officials at the event said they hoped to turbo-charge similar efforts across the state to get more products manufactur­ed locally.

“If it’s invented in Connecticu­t, I want it made in Connecticu­t,” said Paul Lavoie, the state’s chief manufactur­ing officer. He added that the state’s relatively high cost of doing business has helped shape innovation in recent years.

“We can’t throw cheap labor at problems, we can’t solve problems in old ways,” Lavoie said. “We need to solve problems in new ways, innovative ways.”

“We’ve always had innovators in the state of Connecticu­t … but we didn’t have an ecosystem that allowed them to get the resources that they deserve,” said Onyeka Obiocha, executive director of CTNext, who also spoke at the FORGE event. He went on to cite the efforts of maker spaces across the state and startup incubators at universiti­es like UConn’s programs and Yale’s Tsai CITY.

“We’re looking at the ways that we can have CTNext be the glue to bring the people who are already doing incredible work around the same table to continue to support our innovators and entreprene­urs in a variety of different ways,” Obiocha said.

Hui of Mobabbi worked with New Haven’s MakeHaven maker space to 3Dprint her smart-potty prototype and benefited from startup accelerato­rs to further develop her product. She ended up winning $1,000 for fifth place in the FORGE contest.

“I think it’s just exciting that I’ve been able to continue to move forward,” Hui said of the process. The FORGE contest was her second, and she said she valued the events for “networking ... just getting the name out, finding resources, making more prototypes and testing.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States