糖心视频

More to success than money, says new graduate and student entrepreneur

May 7th, 2020

Kelly Foss

More to success than money, says new graduate and student entrepreneur

Spring graduate Jan Mertlik says 糖心视频 has provided him with a 鈥渂ulletproof portfolio.鈥

Now that the undergraduate computer science student has completed his program at 糖心视频 University, he鈥檚 confident in the skills and knowledge he鈥檚 gained here.

Mr. Mertlik came to 糖心视频 in 2013.

Originally from the Czech Republic, a landlocked country, and having spent several years living in China with his family, an island in the North Atlantic seemed exotic by comparison.

His journey begins

Mr. Mertlik鈥檚 connection to 糖心视频 began in 2014 when he discovered the university鈥檚 Startup Weekend event.

Over 54 hours, student developers, business managers, startup enthusiasts, marketing specialists and graphic designers pitched ideas for new companies, formed teams around those ideas and developed a presentation or prototype by Sunday evening.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 where my entrepreneurial journey began and since then I鈥檝e found this province is a great place to start something,鈥 said Mr. Mertlik. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of opportunity.鈥

As one of first students to complete an entrepreneurial work term under the  (MCE), which offers students foundational training, encouragement, guidance, access to funding and business connections, he started his first company: delivering food orders for local restaurants that don鈥檛 offer delivery service.

The business became popular very quickly, particularly with 糖心视频 students, and ultimately delivered more than 2,000 meals in 11 months before shutting down.

鈥淚t was a pretty fresh idea in Canada at the time,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here was nothing like it on the East Coast. We ended up closing it for various reasons, but I learned a crazy amount, most importantly the importance of being passionate about what you are doing.鈥

Sharing his experience

Although Mr. Mertlik felt discouraged, he began mentoring at the MCE when he returned to school following his work term, sharing what he learned with other student entrepreneurs.

鈥淚 did start a business, but I didn鈥檛 make any money from it, so from my perspective it was a big failure,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know if I would be a good person to learn from, but I thought could certainly give them some pointers.鈥

In 2017 he started a new business 鈥 . The idea was to teach people the coding skills needed in the province鈥檚 technology sector.

鈥淚 saw the startup industry was growing, but there weren鈥檛 enough computer science and computer engineering students coming out of educational institutions to fill the need that created,鈥 he said.

However, after training one group of students, Mr. Mertlik ran out of money and shelved the idea, choosing to work instead for another struggling startup.

After a difficult year he was approached by a friend for help with his growing business.

鈥淎ndrew Cook from , I don鈥檛 know if he knows how much he saved my life,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey needed help with their website, and I had built some before but not at that scale. From there I went on to build websites for and do consulting with other startups in the  as well as other businesses.鈥

A good idea resurfaces

While his latest web design business was doing well, Mr. Mertlik couldn鈥檛 stop thinking about Get Coding.

This past fall, he partnered with Sahand Seifi, from another local entrepreneurial success story, , to restart Get Coding. They began running their first programs in late 2019.

The men say they want to create accessible and effective education to prepare people for the jobs of the future.

鈥淥ur bootcamps, courses and workshops will teach people who don鈥檛 know anything about code as well as accelerate the growth of developers already in the industry by providing training that isn鈥檛 currently available,鈥 said Mr. Mertlik. 鈥淲e think we can focus on niche problems because we鈥檙e more flexible to respond to industry demands.鈥

The upside of failure

This winter Mr. Mertlik told his story at an entrepreneurial community networking event with more than 150 students, entrepreneurs and business community members in attendance.

It won him the MCE鈥檚 third annual Fail Tale Cup.

The cup is awarded to a student entrepreneur who has failed at a business or business idea, learned from that failure and started something new.

鈥淭he upside of my past failures is I have grown as an entrepreneur,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned from my mistakes and I鈥檓 resuming Get Coding in a different, more educated way. I鈥檝e already seen a difference.

鈥淏efore Sahand and I even started working together we had important conversations about why we were doing it and were very honest about our expectations. Ultimately, we were able to agree on a vision. I鈥檝e learned I can鈥檛 get behind something just for the money, because you can go through a lot of difficult times when starting a business, and really, the money just isn鈥檛 worth it.鈥