CodeLaunch DFW Offers Tech Startups Free Software Development—and a Chance at $150K in Non-Equity Investments » Dallas Innovates

CodeLaunch DFW Offers Tech Startups Free Software Development—and a Chance at $150K in Non-Equity Investments » Dallas Innovates

If you’ve got an early-stage tech startup that would benefit from free assistance developing your software, apply for CodeLaunch DFW, which takes place November 15 at Gilley’s South Side Ballroom in Dallas.

For the first time, semifinalists will be eligible for up to $150K in investments from Cyrannus, a network of experts aiming to help founders connect with the VC market.

Part seed accelerator competition, part tech tradeshow, and part startup conference, CodeLaunch is celebrating a milestone. Founded by Frisco-based Code Authority in 2013, CodeLaunch is now hosting multiple events a year, and last month expanded outside the United States to Guadalajara, Mexico. CodeAuthority was acquired by Plano-based Improving in 2019. Improving is the producer of CodeLaunch.

CodeLaunch Founder Jason W. Taylor (left) and Raheel Malik on stage with Kaymon Farmer (center), founder of Concession Team. The startup won the Judge’s Choice Champion award after applying to CodeLaunch five times.

“CodeLaunch is a startup and rock-n-roll show like nothing you’ve ever seen before! It’s not like the ‘Pitch Events’ we’ve all been to,” Jason W. Taylor, founder of CodeLaunch and president and founder of CodeAuthority, said in a statement. “It’s the greatest startup show on earth!”

It seems 2022 CodeLaunch Judge Drew Donahoe agrees: “CodeLaunch was the most entertaining startup event I have ever been involved with. There isn’t another pitch competition out there where the judges, contestants, hosts, and audience all have an absolute blast.”

How it works

CodeLaunch is free and takes no equity. Your company must be based in the United States, Canada, or Mexico. Applications require a pitch deck and a code-ready mockup for your software and must be submitted no later than September 24. 

Startups accepted into the program will have homework to complete by October 8, with semifinalist pitch meetings taking place the following week. Then teams of professional software developers, a.k.a. the PCL, or Pro Coder League, will “draft” their favorite startups who become finalists. A two-day hackathon will develop each finalist startup’s product, which will be demonstrated live in a pitch competition and showcase event at CodeLaunch DFW.

Attendees will vote for their favorite product to determine the winners, with PCL teams eligible for a $2,500 prize and the Hackathon Championship Belt for their brand.

As for the $150K in investments from Ohio-based Cyrannus, semifinalists from the last five CodeLaunch events (August 2022 through September 2023) are eligible to take home the grand prize of $100K for what Cyrannus determines as the best scoring “commercial” startup and $50K for the top scoring “impact” startup.

Lee Mosbacker, founder of Cyrannus, said in a statement, “Not only will they get the cash investment, but the founders will also be introduced to a network that will help them refine their idea and prepare them for a follow-on raise.”

Get on the list.
Dallas Innovates, every day.

Sign up to keep your eye on what’s new and next in Dallas-Fort Worth, every day.

One quick signup, and you’re done.
View previous emails.

R E A D   N E X T

Calling itself “the Uber for large groups,” Austin-based Fetii expanded to Dallas-Fort Worth late last year. Already popular at universities across North Texas, the 15-passenger ride-sharing service has now teamed up with San Francisco-based GetMyBoat to make partying on the water a breeze. Fetii CEO Matthew Iommi tells Dallas Innovates why the waves beckoned—and how he’s planning for national expansion.

So how do you start in approaching big problems? Tare says it’s all about the basics: “You start from the very basics and think about data collection. What you measure now, you need to measure again in the future to see if there’s a trend line.”

Already carbon neutral, Dallas Fort Worth International Airport hosted an internal competition with one goal: turning the airport into a zero-waste zone. “We need all hands on deck to get there,” says Chris McLaughlin, EVP of operations at the airport.

From a cute rolling robot to a hulking DC fast charger that can juice up to five EVs at a time, check out the next-gen mobile EV charging solutions being demonstrated during two weeks in June at DFW Airport.

This content was originally published here.