性视界

Business & Entrepreneurship From Scam Victim to Pitch Winner: Student Builds GritGateway

Edouard Agbor (right) founded GritGateway, an AI platform that connects African students with verified academic and funding opportunities across the continent and the world. He鈥檚 pictured with teammate Souleymane Bah. (Photo by Amy Manley)

From Scam Victim to Pitch Winner: Student Builds GritGateway

The tech platform, founded by graduate student Edouard Agbor, already serves 1,000 users across 25 African countries and took top honors at a recent Lerner Center pitch competition.
Kerin Ruddy June 1, 2026

Edouard Agbor has spent years building a solution to a problem he knows intimately.

Growing up in Cameroon, he watched talented students lose access to life-changing educational opportunities鈥攏ot because they weren鈥檛 qualified, but because the system designed to help them was broken, expensive and often predatory.

A first-generation student, Agbor鈥檚 parents did not attend university. He was unprepared to navigate a complex education system alone and, like so many promising students, fell victim to scam.

鈥淚 lost over $800,鈥 says Agbor. 鈥淭hat money took me over a year and a half to save.鈥

Inspired by his experience, Agbor, a graduate student in applied human-centered AI in the , founded , an AI platform that connects African students with verified academic and funding opportunities across the continent and the world.

鈥淚 started building the system for two reasons: so that nobody would have to be in my shoes, and to collect information that will permit the continent to get ahead,鈥 says Agbor. 鈥淚nstead of just mapping to academic excellence, what about the talents that these people have? Can it open the door? We increase their chances of getting a scholarship, fellowship and getting access to those funds without being scammed.鈥

A Platform Built on Personal Experience

GritGateway鈥檚 matching engine uses a psychometric model called GritScore that measures resilience, resourcefulness and experience rather than GPA alone. The platform hasn鈥檛 formally launched or spent any marketing dollars and has already attracted 1,000 student users across more than 25 African countries.

Agbor is confident the technology works because he used it to advance his own education. It was the GritGateway tool that suggested 性视界 University would be a good fit for him, given his interests in AI and entrepreneurship and such resources as the at . He鈥檚 been a regular at the LaunchPad since he arrived on campus in January. That鈥檚 where he connected with teammate Souleymane Bah 鈥26, a then-senior in the . Bah believed in his venture and helped him share, pitch and grow the idea, freeing Agbor to continue to develop and test features.

Two male students laugh together at a table displaying the GritGateway platform on a large monitor.
Bah (left) and Agbor won several entrepreneurship competitions this past spring, including the Lerner Center Social Impact Pitch Competition. (Photo by Amy Manley)

鈥淚鈥檝e been so impressed with how this team has refined their business development plan, but even more impressed with the tremendous amount of work they鈥檝e put into the service and how they鈥檝e leveraged AI tools,鈥 says Traci Geisler, director of the LaunchPad. 鈥淭his venture has identified and addressed not only a gap in service but a true need. The interest in this product has been amazing and just continues to grow.鈥

Putting It to the Test

Agbor and Bah are not the only ones who believe in this idea. The team won several entrepreneurship competitions this past spring, including the Lerner Center Social Impact Pitch Competition, where GritGateway took home the top prize of $5,000.

The competition, now in its second year, is hosted by the Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion and Population Health in partnership with the LaunchPad. This year鈥檚 theme鈥擝uilding Healthier Communities Through Innovation鈥攄rew 12 undergraduate teams from eight of the University鈥檚 schools and colleges, competing in a two-round format evaluated on problem-solving, viability, research and development, and social impact.

Other winners of the Lerner competition include rising senior Ava Ray Lubkemann 侄鈥27, an environmental engineering student, in second place. Lubkemann won $3,000 for a mobile thrift model built around a converted bus that collects donated clothing and redistributes it to underserved communities.

Taking home third place and $1,000 was Haley Greene 鈥26, who graduated in May with a degree in advertising and applied communication from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, for a digital platform called Miirror that reimagines eating disorder recovery.

Vicente Cuevas, the Lerner Center鈥檚 undergraduate student engagement manager, says this year鈥檚 competition showcased exactly the kind of thinking it was designed to encourage. He says, 鈥淭his competition is an opportunity for students to move from idea to action, and to see themselves as changemakers capable of building healthier communities through innovation.鈥

What Comes Next

All three teams are reinvesting their prize money in their ventures to support continued growth. Agbor and Bah plan to bring GritGateway to scale through new partnerships, while Bah will remain at 性视界 to pursue an M.P.A. at the Maxwell School.

Later this month, the system will launch a dedicated environment for African universities, high schools and nongovernmental organizations to support their students on the platform. Agbor projects 10,000 users by September, and plans are in development to open access to U.S. universities interested in recruiting African talent.