From senior year to startup launch, without missing a beat

December 7, 2020

Graduation is still a few weeks away, but Fall 2020 graduate Samantha O鈥橞rien is already starting her career as a tech entrepreneur.

 A graphic featuring a headshot of student Samantha O'Brien
A graphic featuring a headshot of student Samantha O'Brien

Samantha O鈥橞rien says her friends often tease her about being the person who always has a new side hustle. She was the kid with the lemonade stand. The kid who inventoried her stuffed animals and tried to sell off the less-loved to the neighborhood kids. More recently, she had a successful home bakery and cake decorating business, marketing her sweets and services through Facebook. When she decided she needed a new hobby, she bought a vinyl cutter and started a custom printing business. It鈥檚 always something.

It doesn't shock her friends and family all that much then that O鈥橞rien鈥檚 first job post-graduation is something entrepreneurial. Technically, she鈥檚 not even waiting for the diploma. Her new company, of which she鈥檚 co-founder and chief technical officer, is actually something that grew out of her computer science capstone senior design project. With some help from Professor Bruce Maxim, she and her classmate Joshua Shewmaker initially connected with two tech entrepreneurs based in Texas to work on developing a debt management app. But one idea led to another and now the four of them are just a month or so away from full launch of an app-based system designed to protect homeowners from contractor fraud. It鈥檚 actually a huge, often silent, problem in the construction and renovation industry right now, and there aren鈥檛 any straightforward solutions. O鈥橞rien says theirs aims to be preventative: Using their app Divvy, homeowners can put money for home renovations and repairs into a secure escrow account, which is then used to pay contractors after satisfactory completion of a job. This way, contractors can see that folks have adequate funds to pay for work, which protects them. And homeowners are protected against contractors pocketing money for a job half done.

O鈥橞rien says her interest in programming started in high school, when she took a chance on a coding class with a favorite teacher as a senior-year elective. But it wasn鈥檛 always a lock that she鈥檇 pursue computer science as a career. It took a few years to navigate the diverse discipline and find a kind of programming that clicked. In fact, computer science isn鈥檛 her only major. French is her other big passion, one that took her overseas for a study abroad experience  junior year, where she stayed at a language school in southern France and got to do cool things like attend the Cannes Film Festival. 鈥淧art of it is I just love the sound of the language. But I think it also goes back to me being a DIY person,鈥 O鈥橞rien explains. 鈥淚t just made sense to me that if I wanted to travel, knowing the language meant I could be free to do things that you wouldn鈥檛 be able to do if you needed someone to translate for you all the time.鈥

O鈥橞rien says there will definitely be more travel in her future. First on her list is a return to France, this time to explore the northern part of the country. But that trip may have to wait a bit. Launching Divvy is keeping her plenty busy for the foreseeable future, so much so that she often forgets she鈥檚 technically still a student for a few more weeks.

鈥淭here definitely are moments where I have to say to myself, 鈥楽am 鈥 you have to study! You haven鈥檛 officially graduated yet!' But I guess it鈥檚 also kind of exciting to think that even before I have my degree, I get to use what I've learned. I mean, we鈥檙e starting a company. I have a title. Maybe that doesn鈥檛 mean much yet. But I guess that officially makes me co-founder of a tech start-up. And really soon, it won鈥檛 be just a side project.鈥