The Day

Entreprene­urs enjoy feedback sessions at CURE Innovation Commons

Stop was part of Paul Singh’s national tech tour

- By LEE HOWARD Day Staff Writer l.howard@theday.com

Groton — Matthew Gillen of Mystic, a 17-year-old student at Grasso Tech, was one of about 100 people who attended Paul Singh’s North American Tech Tour stop Thursday at CURE Innovation Commons, hoping to get some tips on entreprene­urship.

Gillen, who writes apps for Google, got in a quick meeting with Singh, who advised him on some colleges he could attend next year.

As for the apps, Singh told Gillen, “Every 30 days, release something, then blog about it,” Gillen said later.

He thought that was good advice, but he never got a chance to ask him about another of his entreprene­urial ideas: installing Alexa, the Amazon voice assistant, in hotel rooms. He also has an app that sends out a short motivation­al call to people on a daily basis, based on talks he’s gleaned from YouTube.

It’s for people like Gillen as well as more experience­d entreprene­urs that Singh’s tech tour was meant. For Singh, this was the 88th stop — and one of the first tour appearance­s in New England — in the past year and half during a sojourn by Airstream coach in which he has concentrat­ed on the suburbs rather than major hubs such as Boston and Silicon Valley.

Singh is one of the three original founders of 500 Startups, former managing director of the incubator 1776 and a serial entreprene­ur who has assisted the White House.

“He’s been so impressed with the companies he has met,” said Mary Anne Rooke, executive director of Crossroads Venture Group, which arranged the tour stop.

Kim Kelly, who directs the CURE Commons incubator, said the six-hour event included one-on-one podcasts in which entreprene­urs explained their ideas, as well as free business advice and several business-formation and patent lawyers.

The Crossroad Venture Group’s event, which was replicated in the four areas of Connecticu­t that the state has designated as Innovation Places, was presented in partnershi­p with the Ignite Program in which CURE Commons and Spark Makerspace have collaborat­ed. The idea is to spur new business growth in the Thames River region through networking events, education and business support activities.

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