Startups

Here’s what participants got out of Dreamit’s first cybersecurity-focused accelerator

The SecureTech program led to 80 percent of companies gaining customers or developing points of contact, said Managing Director Bob Stasio.

Dreamit's SecureTech program takes companies through 14-weeks of programming. (Courtesy photo)

The inaugural cohort in Dreamit’s SecureTech accelerator program, launched last summer in a bid to spot early companies in the budding cybersecurity market, spent 14 weeks getting coaching, entrepreneur-focused programming and intros to investors.

The net was positive for the seven companies involved — all of which hail from outside of Philly — according to Managing Director Bob Stasio, the former Army vet and IBM exec in charge of the accelerator.

“Around 80 percent of the SecureTech startups gained customers or points of contact,” Stasio said. “One startup gained two paid trials within a week of meeting a large bank and a government org during a Dreamit Customer Sprint.”

https://twitter.com/BobStasio/status/1081302382833737728

During the second portion of the accelerator, dubbed the Investor Sprint, each company met with 15 investors across Silicon Valley, New York and Washington D.C. Most, Stasio said, are in follow-up discussions about potential investment.

For Manoj K. Srivastava, cofounder of Reston, Va.-based startup Graphus, getting intros to chief information security officers and other execs at Fortune 1000 companies was a highlight of participating in the inaugural cohort.

“It’s a fantastic program to boost your customer development mindset and process,” Srivastava said.

Why should companies apply for the upcoming cohort? Stasio said the three-month sprint lets founders learn strategies for selling to large, enterprise-level companies, luring key customers or raising venture capital.

The program does not directly invest in startups in exchange for equity, a habitual playbook for accelerators. Rather, Dreamit Ventures locks down the right to invest in companies’ upcoming funding round. Companies can participate remotely, in keeping with the company’s 2015 model shift.

Here’s how to apply.

Companies: DreamIt Ventures
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

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

Donate to the Journalism Fund

Your support powers our independent journalism. Unlike most business-media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational contributions.

Trending

Immigration-focused AI chatbot wins $2,500 from Temple University to go from idea to action

National AI safety group and CHIPS for America at risk with latest Trump administration firings

How women can succeed in male-dominated trades like robotics, according to one worker who’s done it

The good news hiding in Philly’s 2024 venture capital slowdown

Technically Media