Women innovators gather for Waterloo WIMIn conference
Sharita Henry’s startup will help bridge communication gaps for students on the autism spectrum
Sharita Henry’s startup will help bridge communication gaps for students on the autism spectrum
By Suzanne Bowness University RelationsA lot can happen in a year. Last year, Sharita Henry was a first-time participant in Waterloo Women: Ideas, Makers, and Innovators (WWIMIn), a female-only conference or “ideathon” designed to inspire students, alumni and faculty to collaborate on new ideas for products, businesses and social change.
A year later, Henry is building a web and mobile-based platform called SUNSHINE that will help parents, teachers and therapists of students on the autism spectrum bridge their communications gap by instantly sharing information about the student with everyone on the support team.
Henry is also returning to this year’s WWIMIn ideathon as a judge.
“It's funny because I never would have thought of myself as someone who would start a business or do anything like that, says Henry. “But since the conference I'm actually onto my third business now.”
Women can register for this year’s WIMin conference to be held at the Science Teaching Complex on January 28-29.
Henry’s winning idea at last year’s WWIMIn ideathon got her an invitation to pitch the GreenHouse Big Ideas for Social Good Challenge where she secured a spot at St. Paul’s University College GreenHouse incubator at the University of Waterloo campus.
An environmental business student in her final year at Waterloo, Henry credits the speakers and workshops at last year’s ideathon with helping to solidify her idea within the two-day event. “The workshops were very helpful with getting to the point of being able to actually pitch an idea that you come up with on the same day,” says Henry.
Henry also lined up a position after graduation with Venture for Canada, a non-profit recruitment firm that places top graduates with successful start-ups across the country.
Through the GreenHouse incubator, Henry also secured funding and connected with the Communitech Startup Group, taking on a technical co-founder to help develop the software platform for her idea.
Henry is surprised at how quickly her involvement with entrepreneurship has grown and credits the WIMIn conference as a major starting point for her entrepreneurial journey: “One of the big things I took away last year was that no idea is too small to make a difference and if it's something that you're passionate about then you really are the right person to build that business and to tackle that challenge. I think for women that's not something that we hear very often in other areas of our life.”
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The University of Waterloo acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is co-ordinated within the Office of Indigenous Relations.