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Working With Business
Digimo CEO

Like many UMBC students, Andy Lufburrow has a job
that earns him money and keeps him busy between
classes. But Lufburrow's work is not your usual off-campus
employment. He's the founder and CEO of his own company,
Digimo, a web-development firm with a client base of
major corporations and headquarters in the UMBC Technology
Center. At least it's an easy commute from work to class.
As a freshman, Lufburrow presented his business plan to
the UMBC Technology Center and became the first student
entrepreneur to set up shop in the center's high-tech
incubator program. It wasn't just the economical office
space that Lufburrow found attractive about the incubator
environment--it was the advice, mentoring, and exposure
that the Tech Center could provide. His advisory board
includes respected members of the information technology
industry as well as the University, and they have opened
doors--to clients and to venture capital--for the fledgling
firm. And Digimo's employee base expanded from immediate
family and friends to the enormous talent pool of UMBC
students. In fact, tapping the creative and technical potential
of student employees has become one of Digimo's prime
selling points--it offers clients fresh, eager, young talent
to tackle their Internet needs, as well as providing a
source for highly trained future employees.
For UMBC students, Digimo offers a tremendous opportunity
to learn cutting-edge skills in a real-world business setting.
It takes juggling to balance work and academics, but
Lufburrow is a good role model.
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