Tag Archives: Max Hammer

Young Staples Grads Spark Startup Forum

The Westport Library was packed last night with entrepreneurs (current and future), tech types, and friends and fans of our town’s best and brightest recent Staples High School graduates.

Startup Westport’s “Young Innovators” forum featured 4 alums — none over 25 years old — and an only slightly older venture capitalist.

Dylan Diamond (CEO of Saturn Technologies), Max Hammer and Josh Karol (CEO and CTO, respectively, of CrowdVolt), and Whop CTO Jack Sharkey chatted with Molly O’Shea about the challenges, perils and joys of starting — then running — a multimillion-dollar business while still in college.

Or making the decision to drop out, to do so.

Panelists (from left) Max Hammer, Jack Sharkey, Josh Karol and Dylan Diamond, with moderator Molly O’Shea. (Photo/Kara Curtis)

The money they’ve raised is mind-boggling. So is the creativity they’ve shown, the detours they’ve taken, and the humility with which they talk about their work (which, in all 5 cases, is also their passion).

All gave enormous credit to Staples’ computer science program, which offered the tools to code, create and collaborate.

Diamond noted that then-principal John Dodig and instructor Dave Scrofani provided important backing, when certain administrators wanted to shut down his iStaples app.

(It gave students easy access to schedules, classmates and grades. Now, as Saturn, it’s used by students in 22,000 schools nationwide. Coming soon: colleges.)

Their career paths have already taken them to big companies like Tesla. But the panelists prefer entrepreneurship.

“Shoot for the moon,” Sharkey said. “If you miss, you can always get a job.”

“The opportunity cost in high school and college is so low,” said former University of Pennsylvania student Diamond, adding that young people have great insight into “how to build things.”

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker (far left) read a proclamation honoring Staples’ computer science program. From left: former principal John Dodig, instructors Dave Scrofani and Joanne Klouda, department chair John DeLuca. (Photo/Dan Woog)

The 4 learned the financial side of entrepreneurship along the way (including the importance of giving equity to new hires, at the start).

The young entrepreneurs all echoed Diamond’s advice: “Hire people smarter than you. Don’t pretend you know everything. It’s okay to say ‘I don’t know.'”

“Don’t get too attached to resumes,” Kozol added.

It has not always been easy. During COVID, when schools were closed, Diamond’s user base quickly dropped to “zero.”

But he and his classmates quickly learned the importance of pivoting.

Now Diamond is on his way to making Saturn “the world’s most fun personal calendar.” Google and Microsoft will never know what hit them.

(“06880” often highlights the success of Staples graduates, of all ages and types. If you enjoy this coverage on your hyper-local blog, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Startup Westport Salutes Young Tech Innovators

At 15, Dylan Diamond built an app. Now, his Staples High School classmates had an easy way to view their schedules and grades.

Most people would have stopped there.

Diamond rolled it out nationally. It’s evolved into Saturn — a must-have calendar and time management app for high school and college students.

Customizable and shareable, it includes classes, clubs, sports practice and games, concert and show rehearsals, and more.

Dylan Diamond

As CEO of Saturn Technologies, Diamond oversees 100-plus employees, at its New York headquarters.

Long before he earned a dual degree in computer science and engineering from the University of Pennsylvania, Diamond’s Staples Class of 2017 teachers and classmates knew he’d go far.

Diamond is just one of a remarkable crop of recent SHS grads who are creating companies, raising tens of millions of dollars in funding, and redefining entire industries.

Max Hammer graduated a year before Diamond. He too went to Penn, where he majored in international relations and affairs.

Today, Hammer and classmate Josh Karol — a fellow 2016 Staples grad, who earned a degree in compueter science and mathematics at Emory University — are CEO and CTO, respectively, of CrowdVolt.

Max Hammer and Josh Karol.

Their start-up solves a problem bedeviling their generation: how to exchange rave and EDM tickets, without the hassle of buying them of Facebook Marketplace or Reddit, or paying high fees on other sites.

How serious are they? Hammer and Karol are backed by Y Combinator — the most prominent start-up accelerator in the world.

Jack Sharkey is even younger than those three. The University of Texas computer science and business grad — now CTO of Whop — is a 2018 Staples alum.

His platform connects buyers and sellers in the digital economy, focusing on influencers and content creators.

Jack Sharkey

Whop secured $17 million in a Series A funding round. Investors — including Insight Partners, the Chainsmokers fund and Peter Thiel — valued the startup at $100 million. With a million customers and 3,000 sellers, Whop has facilitated $100 million in transactions.

Like Diamond, Hammer and Karol, Sharkey got his start in Staples’ computer science program. He created an app offering schedules, sites and other info on all 27 sports played at any of Connecticut’s 183 high schools — including varsity, JV and freshman.)

Next Monday, November 25 (6:30 p.m., Westport Library), they’ll all pay it forward.

The 4 creative, hard-working entrepreneurial superstars will be featured at Startup Westport’s Young Innovators Forum.

Molly O’Shea

The Staples connection continues with the moderator. Molly O’Shea

A 2014 Staples grad who earned a BA in design and entrepreneurship at New York University, she’s a venture capital investor, and founder of Sourcery, the VC deal and startup trend newsletter.

Previous Startup Westport forums focused on women and minorities.

Now, Westport’s public-private tech and innovation partnership shines a spotlight on a new group of entrepreneurs. All are younger than 26.

Next week’s Young Innovators Forum is open to all ages.

“We are excited to welcome Staples High School students, their parents, alumni and all other Westporters for an evening celebrating the success of these extraordinary, home-grown innovators — and to hear how they journeyed from classrooms here to the pinnacle of innovation,” says Startup Westport co-founder and president Cliff Sirlin.

The panelists will discuss the challenges they’ve faced, the creative solutions they’ve pioneered, and how Westport and Staples shaped their journeys.

Hammer looks forward to inspiring others, and building connections — just as he did, a few years ago here.

Diamond adds, “The mentorship I received, and the encouragement to build products that served the community, were hugely motivating. I’m thrilled to return, to share my experiences.”

O’Shea — who is coming from California to moderate the evening — notes, “Each of these companies has achieved incredible milestones and legitimacy.

“This is not just a typical panel. They’ve collectively raised from top-tier Silicon Valley firms, hit significant growth, and reached product market fit.”

And, looking back at her alma mater, O’Shea says, “I’m excited to support Staples’ growing role in tech.”

(The Young Innovators Forum is free, but registration is required. Click here for details.)

(“06880” often highlights the success of Staples graduates, of all ages and types. If you enjoy this coverage on your hyper-local blog, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Staples Grads Give Rave, EDM Fans A CrowdVolt

Do you want tickets to see Timmy Trumpet, Four Tet or Mura Masa?

Interested in a show at Terminal 5, Knockdown Center or Under the K Bridge?

If those artists and venues are incomprehensible to you, you’re not part of the rave and EDM* scenes.

But if you are, you know how hard it is to exchange tickets.

Fortunately, you’re about to get a jolt. A CrowdVolt, in fact.

That’s the name of a new start-up. Two of the 3 founders are Staples High School grads: Max Hammer and Josh Karol. Carter Bassler is helping out as an intern.

If successful, they’ll create a solution to the hassle of buying tickets off Facebook Marketplace, Reddit, or paying high fees on other sites. Right now tickets sell out early, and can’t be traded easily.

There’s no guarantee of success, of course. But they’re backed by Y Combinator — the most prominent start-up accelerator in the world.

From left: Josh Karol, Max Hammer and Aria Mohseni, at Y Combinator headquarters in San Francisco.

It’s funded 4,000 new enterprises — including Airbnb, DoorDash, Instacart and Stripe — at $500,000 each. Their combined valuation is $600 billion.

Every 6 months, over 10,000 companies apply to participate in Y Combinator’s next “batch.” The acceptance rate is 1.5 to 2 %.

CrowdVolt cleared that hurdle at the end of last year. When they got news they were accepted, Staples Class of 2016 grads Hammer and Karol quit their jobs — investment banking at UBS and software engineering at Millennium Management, respectively — and headed to San Francisco.

Since then, they’ve been immersed in intense work with the accelerator. They’re learning about the start-ups world, and meeting a network of already successful Y Combinator founders. When they and their fellow start-ups’ “batch” is done, they’ll head back to New York, and really try to fly.

CrowdVolt’s third co-founder currently in San Francisco is Aria Mohseni. A DJ and friend of Karol’s from Emory University, he was a roommate with Karol and University of Pennsylvania grad Hammer in New York.

Carter Bassler

Bassler, meanwhile, works remotely. The 2020 Staples alum is a senior at the University of Virginia, finishing his work as a computer science major. He met the others through his Staples friend Zach Karol, Josh’s brother.

“What StockX did for sneakers and streetwear, we’re doing for tickets,” Hammer promises. (The CrowdVolt name conveys the idea of large audiences, and electric excitement.)

Existing rave and EDM markets “claim to be 2-sided” for ticket buyers and sellers, he says.

“CrowdVolt wants to give more power to buyers. And when sellers know what they’re willing to pay, there will be more accurate pricing.”

Buyers can either “buy now” or bid. Sellers can “sell now” or ask for a higher price. All transactions are publicly viewable.

Furthermore, CrowdVolt says, “concerts are communal events meant to be experienced with others. So we’ve made buying and selling a social experience, with social media integration and messaging.”

The founders know the rave and EDM scene well. They attended over 80 shows last year alone. “We know the marketplace experience through the existing mediums is poor, so have opted to rebuild it ourselves,” they say.

Their time in San Francisco has been a whirlwind of activity. Working on a start-up can be isolating, so Y Combinator brings groups together. They learn from each other, and those who have already been through the process.

It’s a big adjustment from the structure of corporate life to starting a start-up, Hammer says. Y Combinator keeps them focused.

“They keep stressing: If you’re not coding or talking to customers, you’re wasting your time,” says Hammer.

The 3 founders in San Francisco do the back-end work. Bassler, in Charlottesville, takes care of the front-end.

CrowdVolt’s look is rave-inspired.

The youngest members of the current batch are still in high school. A few are in their 40s. Most, however, are the CrowdVolt founders’ age: 20somethings.

Hammer and his crew see rave and EDM as the beachhead to other genres, and markets beyond New York.

Since CrowdVolt’s February launch, they’ve handled $26,000 in transaction volume. Five thousand users have visited the site. Those numbers should soar, as spring and summer events come online.

Marketing has been through social media, street posters and word of mouth. CrowdVolt plans to host in-person events too.

Returning to New York will be exciting. They won’t be far from Staples — where all 3 were first inspired on the road to today.

Karol was introduced to coding as a freshman in Dave Scrofani’s class. Bassler’s freshman year programming teacher was Dr. Nick Morgan.

The hands-on skills they learned were some of the most important lessons from high school, the founders say.

For which all the Timmy Trumpet, Four Tet and Mura Masa ticket-buying fans in the tri-state area should be grateful.

*Electronic dance music. Duh.

(To see the app, or sign up in the New York area, click here. To join the waitlist for your city, click here. For more information, email founders@crowdvolt.com).

(Rave and EDM fans — and those of every other type of music — have a home at “06880.” We cover the entire local entertainment scene, and much more. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)