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Startup Weekend On The Turkish Border Unites Two Countries' Entrepre

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  • Startup Weekend On The Turkish Border Unites Two Countries' Entrepre

    STARTUP WEEKEND ON THE TURKISH BORDER UNITES TWO COUNTRIES' ENTREPRENEURS

    Tech Crunch
    Nov 28 2014

    Posted 20 hours ago by Elmira Bayrasli

    It's not unusual to encounter a Startup Weekend somewhere in the
    world. The trademarked event that brings together individuals eager
    to build and present it before a panel of entrepreneurship experts
    and investors is well known and widely replicated.

    Yet, when a Startup Weekend involves Armenia and Turkey - known
    adversaries - things change.

    Earlier this month, the Economic Policy Research Foundation of Turkey
    (TEPAV), the Public Journalism Club (PJC) based in Yerevan, and
    Global Entrepreneurship Week in Armenia collaborated to host Startup
    Weekend Armenia-Turkey. It was the first Startup Weekend to involve
    entrepreneurs from two countries with no diplomatic relations. It
    was also a rare Startup Weekend to take place in two different cities.

    Kicking off in Armenia's capital Yerevan, more than two-dozen men
    and women crowded into Elite Plaza, a sleek business center. The
    facilitators, Ece Idil Kasap and Emin Okutan, partners of the Turkish
    accelerator Viveka, eased the crowd donned in black Startup Weekend
    t-shirts into the weekend's activities. It was a slow start, with
    more feet shuffling and hands in pockets.

    Soon enough, however, the room started to buzz. Armenians and Turks
    broke into six mixed teams and began to work on developing their
    startup ideas. By the time pitches came around on Sunday afternoon
    in Gyumri - a city 75 miles northwest of Yerevan - new ventures,
    along with friendships, had been formed.

    Mihran Babayan and Vahagn Hovhannisyan, both based in Yerevan,
    had come to the event with their plan for Home Planning, an online
    interior design business. "I thought I could develop a bigger network
    with Turkish people," Hovhannisyan said, noting that Armenia is
    a land-locked country of just 3 million. "During the 24 hours of
    working with the Turks I got new ideas that are great and I made
    great connections."

    Similarly Mariam Dilbandyan came to Startup Weekend Armenia-Turkey
    with Seeing Hands, a social enterprise that trains the blind to give
    massages, with the hopes of building her business. "I heard that a
    Turkish group was coming and I know that in Turkey there are many
    beaches," she said. And where there are beaches there are people in
    search of massages. With 80 million in Turkey, Dilbandyan pointed
    out, she has a better chance of scaling her business idea than merely
    staying in Armenia.

    "My grandparents are from Western Armenia - from Erzurum," she said.

    "So I feel a connection with them. I love Turkish people."

    Hers was a view that was echoed. In fact, throughout the weekend, as
    Sinem Duman, a student at Turkey's TOBB University noted, there was
    little if any talk about the historical enmities between Armenia and
    Turkey. "I thought the atmosphere would be more tense," she said. "In
    fact everyone was eager to make friendships."

    "This was an awesome chance to work with our colleagues from Turkey,"
    said Artavazd Barseghyan, the co-founder of a Yerevan-based software
    company. He noted that he didn't think about his country's bad
    relationship with Turkey. "I think that the younger set of minds
    are different; we are open and don't find problems - we want to find
    solutions." He noted that the Armenia-Turkey Startup Weekend proved
    that. "It doesn't matter to which nation you belong to - we are united
    in technology."

    Among the six teams at Startup Weekend Armenia-Turkey that found
    success, Home Planning and Seeing Hands earned recognition for their
    original ideas. It was, however, a startup that fuses the sharing
    economy to cloud storage - "an Airbnb for file sharing" that came
    out on top - WeCloud.

    WeCloud, an idea put forward by Berkay Akcora, Anita Alexanian, Umutcan
    Duman and Gor Vardanyan, addresses the increasing problem of growing
    data but little storage. The startup allows a user to "trade in unused
    local storage to provide low cost, unlimited hosting services."

    The experience both Alexanian and Duman noted exceeded their collective
    expectations. "It's amazing what you can do in 24 hours - how much
    you can learn," said Duman. More important, he noted, was how much
    he bonded with his Armenian partners. "We weren't focused on being
    Armenian or Turkish - just on being the best."

    http://techcrunch.com/2014/11/27/startup-weekend-on-the-turkish-border-unites-two-countries-entrepreneurs/

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