The Southern Berks News

Alvernia’s O’Pake Institute client OCOA wins business plan competitio­n

- By Donna Rovins drovins@pottsmerc.com

OCOA Beauty, a Readingbas­ed company that makes curly hair products, has won first place at the annual tecBRIDGE Business Plan Competitio­n in Wilkes-Barre.

The company, owned by sisters Cory Varona-Corniel and Nicol Varona-Cancelmo, won the $10,000 prize at the competitio­n, as well as in-kind services valued at $100,000 including billboards and consulting services.

OCOA is a client of Alvernia University’s O’Pake Institute SPARK Business Incubator, and was one of three finalists the institute had at the April competitio­n. The other non-collegiate finalist was Dr. Kryn McClain, owner of CatapalloV­R, and the collegiate finalist was Logan Minford, an Alvernia student entreprene­ur and owner of Wooden Chair Coffee Co.

“This win and having three finalists at the tecBRIDGE Business Plan Competitio­n is a testament to Alvernia and O’Pake’s mission to drive economic developmen­t and entreprene­urship while facilitati­ng student experienti­al learning opportunit­ies,” Dr. Rodney S. Ridley Sr., Alvernia vice president of research economic developmen­t & innovation and chief operating officer of the O’Pake Institute, said in a statement. “The entreprene­urs and students get to learn alongside each other while making critical strides in their journey and I am grateful to be able to see that transforma­tion unfold.”

This is the second year the business incubator has had finalists in the tecBridge Business Plan competitio­n. OCOA Beauty is the business incubator’s first winner.

Early-stage entreprene­urs compete in the non-collegiate division, and student teams from the region’s colleges and universiti­es compete in the collegiate division of tecBRIDGE. Competitor­s provide deliverabl­es in four areas — executive summary, competitor analysis, proforma financials and a pitch deck — which they presented April 13. Industry expert judges evaluated the presentati­ons ahead of the awards ceremony, which was held April 27.

“It feels really amazing to be the winner of the tecBRIDGE Business Plan Competitio­n,” Varona-Corniel said in a statement. “Seeing all of the hard work paying off, the hours of practice, mentorship, and having so many people encourage us to get to the finish line is an amazing feeling for us.”

Getting to the finals

The team at the O’Pake Institute SPARK Business Incubator identified clients it thought would be good candidates for the competitio­n, then encouraged them to apply, according to Sarah Heckman, graduate assistant of client services for the O’Pake Institute. Once all the applicatio­ns were in, the tecBRIDGE organizati­on selected five non-collegiate and five collegiate finalists to pitch at the competitio­n.

Varona-Cancelmo said the pair from OCOA worked closely with their mentor, Michelle Conway, director of student and client services at Alvernia’s O’Pake Institute, who has also worked with OCOA with various grant efforts.

“When we received the news that we were finalists, we practiced and practiced our pitch. We dedicated at least two hours a day to perfect the pitch,” the pair said in an emailed response to questions.

The team from OCOA was one of the only companies to do the pitch presentati­on without notes on the computer, which they said made an impression on the judges.

“We loved the experience and truly enjoyed sharing more about our business. It is one of our favorite things to do,” they said.

“I am overjoyed to see that the countless hours that Cory and Nicol spent crafting their business plan with the O’Pake team and practicing their pitch pay off,” Conway said.

Growing the company

OCOA Beauty, which was formerly DN Organics, won FLIC (Financial Lending and Innovation Collaborat­ive) funding from the O’Pake Institute in November 2022 and has been a client of the incubator since.

The $5,000 FLIC microgrant was for branding and marketing services and website developmen­t to help expand the company’s reach.

Varona-Corneil and Varona-Cancelmo

said the SPARK network, mentors and the connection­s to other founders have been incredible, opening opportunit­ies for them to continue to grow their business.

The team said they rebranded the company from DN Naturals to OCOA Beauty about nine months after starting the business.

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