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Lighting up focus: What IntelliLight is learning through the TIA Summer Accelerator

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Three weeks ago, IntelliLight was mostly a sketchbook full of ideas, a concept built on my yearlong neuroscience thesis and a shared frustration: Why are the tools that claim to help us focus … so distracting? 

Today, that sketchbook is turning into a working minimum viable product (MVP).

Through the TIA Summer Accelerator, we’re not just building a smart lamp — we’re building an experience that helps students tap into hyperfocus using light, sound, and behavioral neuroscience. If there’s one thing we’ve learned so far, it’s this: building a venture means being ready to rethink everything — quickly.

Failing isn’t the opposite of progress. It is progress.

In our first week, we were proud of how sleek our design looked on paper. Then we tried to explain it to a room full of mentors … and it fell apart. Too abstract. Too complicated. Too “techy.”

But that moment of breakdown forced us to get better, not at defending our idea, but at translating it. We tossed the scientific jargon, sharpened the pain point, and started testing with real students. That failure wasn’t a roadblock; it was a reroute.

How the TIA funding fuels our next step

With the $10,000 from TIA, we’re able to do something that would have taken months otherwise: manufacture a functional MVP. This means:

  • Building a batch of early test units
  • Collecting real user feedback from students and parents
  • Launching a pre-order website
  • Refining the user experience before scale

This isn’t just money. It’s momentum. It’s giving us a runway to prove IntelliLight works in the hands of students, not just on a pitch slide.

In-person energy > Any Zoom room

Being in the same space with other founders has made all the difference. There’s a certain kind of magic that only happens when ideas get whiteboarded in the hallway, when you get spontaneous feedback while waiting for lunch, or when someone sees your prototype sketch and says, “Hey, I know a patent lawyer who can help.”

One of the most impactful moments so far has been working with our mentor, Kimberley Schafer ’92, whose expertise in branding and go-to-market strategy challenged us to rethink how we tell our story. With her guidance, we shifted our messaging from “a smart lamp” to a cognitive enhancement system — a reframing that not only speaks more clearly to our value but also resonates deeply with both students and the parents who support them.

Lessons so far: A mini manual in progress

If we had to draft a “How to launch a neuroscience-based venture (as a student)” guide based on just three weeks of TIA, it might include:

  • Your first idea is probably wrong, but it’s a start.
  • If users don’t understand it in 30 seconds, go back and simplify.
  • Don’t get lost in tech. Stay grounded in use.
  • Speak in outcomes, not features. “Better focus” speaks louder than “binaural beats and circadian alignment.”

The road ahead

IntelliLight is still young, but thanks to TIA, it’s no longer just an idea. It’s becoming something real — one prototype, one conversation, and one pivot at a time.

We’re not just building a lamp. We’re designing a better way to study, to focus, and to feel in control of your brain again.

And we can’t wait to show you what’s next.