Startups

Can this startup get your college-town landlord to shape up?

TenantU wants to bridge the communication gap between renters and landlords.

Main Street in Newark, Del. (Photo by Flickr user barthjg, used under a Creative Commons license)

When you were in college, did you wish you could get help hunting for apartments beyond shady Craigslist ads? Did you wish you knew how to deal with your absentee landlord when the faucet would not stop leaking and it kept flooding the kitchen floor? Well, you should’ve had TenantU.
The fledgling University of Delaware startup wants to become a platform that bridges the gap between student tenants and landlords.
Horn Program student Jacob Jeifa will be starting his graduate studies this fall, but this summer he’s working on the Summer Founders Program. That’s where he got the idea for TenantU. He recruited his friend, Adam Goldstein, who is a graduate student at Lehigh University, to work with him, along with Wilmington University grad student Wilson Hsu.


What ties this team together? They all attended the University of Delaware as undergrads.
“We have 120 properties listed right now, we expect to have more than that by the fall,” said Jeifa, who is optimistic about the platform’s user growth. “We expect to be at over 500 by the fall. We could add all of these properties if we really wanted to, but we wanted [the platform] to grow organically. We wanted the landlords to come to us. We want their engagement.”
The platform is currently in beta testing among student and landlord users in the University of Delaware and Lehigh University areas.
The design work was outsourced. Families and company partners funded roughly $24,000 for web development costs, Jeifa said.

Companies: University of Delaware

Before you go...

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.

3 ways to support our work:
  • Contribute to the Journalism Fund. Charitable giving ensures our information remains free and accessible for residents to discover workforce programs and entrepreneurship pathways. This includes philanthropic grants and individual tax-deductible donations from readers like you.
  • Use our Preferred Partners. Our directory of vetted providers offers high-quality recommendations for services our readers need, and each referral supports our journalism.
  • Use our services. If you need entrepreneurs and tech leaders to buy your services, are seeking technologists to hire or want more professionals to know about your ecosystem, Technical.ly has the biggest and most engaged audience in the mid-Atlantic. We help companies tell their stories and answer big questions to meet and serve our community.
The journalism fund Preferred partners Our services
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

The person charged in the UnitedHealthcare CEO shooting had a ton of tech connections

From rejection to innovation: How I built a tool to beat AI hiring algorithms at their own game

Where are the country’s most vibrant tech and startup communities?

The looming TikTok ban doesn’t strike financial fear into the hearts of creators — it’s community they’re worried about

Technically Media