Dr. Jonathan Scaccia working in his previous SPARK Business Incubator office space
SPARK Business Incubator hones in on tech startups
founded by Dr. Jonathan Scaccia, is the first tenant to graduate from the SPARK Business Incubator at 最新91制片厂鈥檚 and is moving to a coworking space for businesses and professionals, in Lancaster, Pa.
鈥淭he SPARK Business Incubator provides start-up companies with a supportive environment to learn, grow and thrive. Incubator space is intended to be temporary, and incubator graduation is a call for celebration,鈥 said O鈥橮ake鈥檚 Director of Student and Client Services Michelle Conway. 鈥淚t is our goal is to mentor and advise incubator companies so that they can hit their critical milestone and take their businesses to the next level. As we enter 2023, the incubator will be focusing on early-stage technology start-ups. Our ultimate goal is to incubate businesses that support the local economy and add to the brain gain of Berks County.鈥
PubTrawlr is an artificial intelligence-driven platform that helps people find new and relevant scientific research on demand. Scaccia credits O鈥橮ake with much of PubTrawlr鈥檚 success and growth from what began as a basement experiment to what is now a flourishing business.
鈥淥鈥橮ake met me where I was at, especially when I didn鈥檛 know what was going on or what the appropriate business steps were,鈥 said Scaccia. 鈥淭hey provided services that synced up with what I needed. As an early-stage entrepreneur, there鈥檚 a temptation to try to do everything yourself. But to get things done the right way, you need to rely on others, and O鈥橮ake was the 鈥榦ther鈥 that helped me get there.鈥
Scaccia was part of the inaugural cohort of SPARK Business Incubator tenants along with Adrean Turner and Radarra McLendon. Turner, life coach, author, speaker, and pageant queen, will also be migrating from the SPARK Incubator to start a new venture following her lease. McLendon, founder of local nonprofit The Village of Reading, transitioned to a larger facility following her lease to support her business growth.
鈥淲e went from servicing 50 clients virtually in 2020, to seven tenants and 100 clients in 2021 to gradating our first incubator tenant and servicing well over 200 clients,鈥 said O鈥橮ake鈥檚 Chief Operating Officer Dr. Rodney S. Ridley Sr. 鈥淚 look forward to seeing all of the impeccable work our team of staff, O鈥橮ake Fellows and Graduate Assistants will continue to do to serve local business and boost economic development in Greater Berks County in the new year and the years to follow. This is just the beginning.鈥
an online video streaming technology company founded by Hayden Craddolph has moved into the SPARK incubator. The O鈥橮ake General Store, which sells O鈥橮ake Honey, has occupied another incubator space. The store has plans to expand and sell products from other incubator clients and local businesses.
O'Pake is seeking an early-stage technology start-up to sign a leasing agreement as a SPARK Business Incubator tenant. To inquire about the lease agreement and accompanying business incubator services, contact Director of Student and Client Services, Michelle Conway at michelle.conway@alvernia.edu or (484) 254-2126.