
Luby Microgrant Pitch Competition
Make your pitch
The Warrington College of Business’s Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center hosts the Luby Microgrant Pitch Competition to support entrepreneurs in their start-up efforts.
Funded by the Joan & Chester Luby Charitable Trust, the competition awards $90,000 in Luby Microgrants to University of Florida student entrepreneur teams. Teams can earn $10,000 each to fund their product or startup.
Competition format
Graduate and undergraduate competitors enter individually or in teams to create growth-oriented business models.
Video pitch
Teams submit their pitch via a YouTube video by the deadline. Videos must be 15 minutes or less.
Judging
Judges narrow down the entries to the winning participants
Winners chosen
Following two weeks of judging, and follow-up questions, if needed, the winners are announced.
Congratulations to the 2024-2025 winners
- Bite Club
- Blue Alpaca
- Club Coffee
- Zenspo
- Endure Canteen
- Luxury Bottle
- Nora
- Persephone’s Spring
- Retirepreneur
- Schedule AI
- Siren
- Torva Tech
- Vivamester
Join the competition
If you’re an entrepreneur who’s up for the pitch, the Luby Microgrant Pitch Competition can offer you a $10,000 prize if you’re one of the winners.
Prizes and judging
Up to $10,000 in grant funding will be provided to the teams selected. The prize money is offered as seed money to promote the pitch’s enactment. The business must actually be started, and prize money checks are written to the new companies, not the individuals.
Pitch criteria
Judges review the pitches based on the following criteria:
- Concept strength
- Market
- Economics of the business
- Operations
- Technical Feasibility
- Management team
- Financing
What judges look for
Judges will look for both the innovativeness of the business idea and the quality of the pitch. The competition rewards creative thinking regarding new markets, products, and services, as well as the team’s strategy to implement its plans.
Competition rules and guidelines
The entrant must certify that at least one member of the team is an enrolled student at the University of Florida, or recent graduate.
- Students can enter the competition individually or form teams.*
- *If you are a student (graduate/undergraduate) working with any university-developed intellectual property, please check with UF Innovate to determine if you are eligible.
- The team leader must be an enrolled student per the college requirement listed above.
- A pitch is not required to register. You will have an opportunity to develop your grant pitch prior to the submission deadline (Friday, September 19th).
- The pitches submitted must be the team’s own original work and ideas.
- Have a clear vision of what business you’re trying to create, and have a good idea of the potential as well as the issues of the intended business.
- Register online by 5 pm on September 12th.
- Tteam member rosters can be updated throughout the competition.
In order to qualify, the team leader must be a full- or part-time student, undergraduate or graduate level, who is currently enrolled in a degree program, and who was registered at the University of Florida. Other team members can be non-UF / non-Santa Fe College students or community members, however, non-student members are not allowed to present as part of the team pitch.
Only one submission of a pitch per team is permitted.
The pitch should contain the following:
- Company description
- Product/service name and description/elevator pitch (customer value proposition)
- Stage of company development (idea, seed, emerging, established)
- What market are you addressing?
- What problems are you trying to solve? (describe your solution to the problem)
- What is your unique competitive advantage?
- What are the most important metrics of success in your business model?
- How does your company make money?
- Competitors/industry description
- Management team and advisors
Individuals may be a member of only one team. Teams may be as small as one student, and there is no maximum size, but bear in mind that there are practical limits to the size of any working group.
Ideas submitted as part of a team’s new business venture must represent the original work of the team members. Team members will sign a certification to this effect as part of the initial entry.
If the new venture has already received funding from any outside sources (angel investors, other competitions, etc.), amounts, investors, and dates of funding must be disclosed in the initial entry. This competition is intended only for student teams that have not received any formal outside investment from venture capital firms or other certified investors and that have received $50,000* or less in outside funds by the start of the fall academic semester. Most teams have yet to raise any monies.
Submitted pitches are protected in the spirit of non-disclosure, and all entry materials will be treated as company confidential. The only people with access to the pitches will be judges and select members of the organizing committee. Materials will not be distributed to any other party unless requested by an entrant team. No other provisions are made to protect intellectual property.
Entrants must adhere to all submission deadlines and guidelines. Pitches must be submitted no later than the appropriate due date and time. No late submissions will be accepted and any submissions that do not follow the guidelines and requirements will not be reviewed.
Entries will be judged by a panel of faculty and professionals involved in the entrepreneurship and investment space. Judges may be successful entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, angel investors, or professional service providers working with the venture community. Any entry is subject to minimum criteria in terms of market potential, viability, and other factors, as determined by the judging panel’s experience. If no entries meet the minimum criteria, prizes might not be awarded. Throughout any and all phases of the competition, all decisions of the judges are final.
Except as stated below, prize money is granted only to the business entity that the winning team forms, e.g. a corporation or LLC. If the winning teams fail to form the business entity and request the prize money from the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center within one year following the competition, the money remains in the competition fund and is not disbursed. Award money will be granted only to seed the start-up and development of the winning idea (e.g. no substitutions may be made without the approval of the UF Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center). Teams and their resultant business entities are responsible for any tax consequences of the prize.
At least 25% of the winning business entity formed must be owned by one or more of the UF students on the winning team. If at the time of the competition, the venture has already been formed and the student participant(s) hold less than 25% equity, consideration will be given as to whether the venture was conceived and launched with co-founders who were UF students within the past four academic years.
The university reserves the right to disqualify, in its sole and absolute discretion, any team from the competition at any time. Reasons for disqualification may include but are not limited to, plagiarism and any other form of academic dishonesty, misappropriation or infringement of the intellectual property of others, and any failure to comply with these rules and regulations. Disqualified teams shall forfeit any and all prizes awarded to them.
The prize money will be distributed to the company or entity that is moving the business plan forward in one increment of 100% of the total prize money after the winners have been announced.
About the Luby family
Through the Joan & Chester Luby Charitable Trust, Chester and Joan Luby began working with the Warrington College of Business to create the Luby Microgrant Pitch Competition.
The Lubys’ passion for innovation was evident throughout their careers. Chester graduated from the University of Chicago and Yale Law School before spending his career in the automotive industry managing multiple Chevrolet dealerships. He also formed and managed two insurance companies which were created to assist car buyers at their dealerships.
Joan attended NYU and the Pratt Institute. As a professional artist, she expressed her vision through art over the course of her life. Her paintings depict subjects drawn from her love of nature, wildlife and everyday life experiences interpreted with her signature geometric prismatic style. Joan passed away in 2015 after 60 years of marriage to Chester.
Thinking about your pitch?
Reach out to our team and we’ll walk you through the process and answer your questions.
Entrepreneurship & Innovation Center
352-273-0330