Photos by Peter Julian
Five years ago, Duncan Walker â13 was working 14-hour days as the cofounder of consumer data startup . Now, as the Universityâs newest entrepreneur-in-residence, heâs helping current students navigate the ins and outs of starting and growing a business.
In February, Walker began holding weekly office hours at the Edmund H. Shea Center for Entrepreneurship, where ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝app students can pick his brain on everything from business concepts to customer strategy.
âThere truly is no better time to start a company than when youâre at university,â said Walker, who is originally from the United Kingdom. âYou have so many resources, so much support. When I talk to students, Iâm constantly trying to reinforce that, telling them to make the most of every day.â
Walkerâs own foray into entrepreneurship began during his junior year, when a friend came to him with an idea for a menswear startup that needed a website. Despite having no previous experience in software development, Walker agreed to build the ecommerce site and taught himself to code.
âI learned by sitting in my dorm room, day and night, just Googling question after question trying to figure it out,â he recalled. âI posted on the ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝app class Facebook pages, âHey, Iâm trying to teach  myself how to code. If you have something youâd like me to build, let me know; just understand itâs going to be really crap because I have no idea what Iâm doing.â
To his surprise, the post resulted in multiple responses, including one from classmate Tom Coburn â13 with an idea for a business that would ultimately become Jebbit.
While he describes his introduction to Jebbit as âserendipitous,â looking back, Walker can identify specific attitudes and behaviors that contributed to his success. Those traitsâinitiative, adaptability, resilience, and self-awarenessâmake up half of what heâs labeled the â2M approachâ to entrepreneurship.
âItâs a method and a mindset,â he said. âYou look at most accelerator programs and theyâre focused on the method, the process of building a business, but the mindset is what really makes a difference when youâre trying to be successful in the real world.â
The early days of Jebbit were anything but glamorous, he said, especially when the team of co-founders, all ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝app students, graduated and suddenly found themselves responsible for their own survival. Still, crammed into a house with 12 other young people, Walker felt more fulfilled than ever before.
âIt was the time of our lives,â he recalled. âWe just felt so empowered, passionate, and excited about what we were doing.â
With financial backing from alumni entrepreneurs and mentoring support from Carroll School of Management Associate Professor of Information Systems John Gallaugher, the Jebbit team honed its product and found success as a platform helping consumers and brands share data in a more open and trustworthy way. The company now employs 55 people and is headquartered in Bostonâs Innovation District. Walker is Jebbitâs Vice President of Research and Development.
In his new role at the Shea Center, Walker hopes to expand the Universityâs network of alumni entrepreneurs to accelerate the growth of dorm room startups operating at ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝app. In many ways, itâs a continuation of the work heâs been doing as managing director of , a startup accelerator and venture fund created by ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝app alumni to support studentsâ entrepreneurial projects.
Walkerâs dual experience as an entrepreneur and mentor is what prompted Shea Center Executive Director Jere Doyle â87, Pâ15 to bring him on board.
âHeâs walked the walk and understands all the things that it takes to build a successful business,â Doyle said. âHe'll be able to connect with our students and relate to them in a very unique way.â
Walker retains fond memories of his three years at ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝app. Originally enrolled at Durham University in England, he arrived at the Heights as a sophomore exchange student and later applied for regular admission. The process wasnât easy, but Walker sensed that his experience at ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝app would be life-changing. He wasnât wrong.
âWhether itâs the things I did really well or the things I didnât do well, I think back on ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝app as the time that has enabled me to do everything Iâve done since and everything I will do in the future,â he said. âIt completely changed my outlook on the world.â
âAlix Hackett | University Communications | February 2019