Marietta High School student wins first round of Junior PioBiz

Marietta, Ohio (03/12/2019) — Marietta High School's Kayla Floyd took the top prize during the first round of Marietta College's Junior PioBiz competition that was held on campus on Friday, March 1.

A total of 18 students from Marietta and Parkersburg South high schools presented 15 business ideas during the "Problem/Solution" phase of Junior PioBiz and Floyd's project - Foster Care - finished first.

Junior PioBiz is a business start-up competition open to all high school students in the Mid-Ohio Valley. The competition is co-sponsored by Marietta Community Foundation and Marietta College.

Parkersburg South's William Lemon and Steven Parr finished second with their plan for NAIL ANCHOR.

Marietta High School claimed the next three spots with Sophia Westbrock claiming third place with an allergy prevention proposal, Katryna Temesvary finished fourth with Blindness and Rose Sandlin was fifth for Veterinarian Clinic.

South's Josh Renfro, Josh Breedlove, and Jimmy Carson claimed the final spot with LIFE IN ALL. The top six teams each received $50 and have been invited back to present their ideas in Round 2 of the competition on April 4. During the Proof of Concept round students will take up to five minutes to prove that their business ideas are feasible.

The top three winning teams in Round 2 of competition will be chosen by the members of the audience and up to four new judges, and will receive the following awards:

Judges for the first round were Jamey Brooks, Superintendent of Construction at the Pleasants Power Station FirstEnergy; Ben W. Ebenhack, Benedum Professor and Industry Partners Chair of Petroleum Engineering and Geology Marietta College; Michael L. Fleak, Mid-Ohio Valley Division President of Premier Bank; Vanessa Watson, President of Gator Shredding Inc.

The members of the audience were also able to vote in the first round by investing their 1,000 PioBiz dollars on their favorite ideas.

Located in Marietta, Ohio, at the confluence of the Muskingum and Ohio rivers, Marietta College is a four-year liberal arts college. Tracing its roots to the Muskingum Academy back in 1797, the College was officially chartered in 1835. Today Marietta College serves a body of 1,200 full-time students. The College offers 49 majors and is consistently ranked as one of the top regional comprehensive colleges by U.S. News & World Report and The Princeton Review, as well as one of the nation's best by Forbes.com. Marietta was selected seventh in the nation according to the Brookings Institution's rankings of colleges by their highest value added, regardless of major.

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Dr. Jacquelyn Khorassani, Director of the Entrepreneurship Program at Marietta College, presents Marietta High School student Kayla Floyd with her first-place certificate from the first round of the Junior PioBiz.