
As part of our Global Entrepreneurial Experience (GEE) in Munich, Germany, my MSEL peers and I participated in a day-long Moonshot Workshop and Sprint hosted by the Strascheg Center for Entrepreneurship (SCE). The challenge: design visionary solutions for the future of Sustainable Urban Mobility in 2054. In cross-cultural teams of Babson and SCE students, we analyzed global mobility trends, used foresight frameworks, and rapidly ideated new ventures. Drawing from my personal experience as an e-bike commuter in Boston and my passion for micromobility infrastructure, I proposed the idea of BikeBus—a solution to connect underserved rural and suburban commuters to urban cycling networks.
GEE Moonshot Sprint | BikeBus – Connecting Commuters
Babson College | Winter 2025


BikeBus is a mobility concept that combines shuttle services with secure, on-board bike transport—helping riders bring their personal (or shared) bikes into cities while reducing car dependency. In addition to contributing the core idea, I served as the team coordinator, facilitating team alignment, managing our research and ideation flow, and ensuring we presented a unified pitch. Working across cultures and time constraints, we refined our concept using tools like future cones, STEEP analysis, and carbon credit frameworks to test desirability, feasibility, and societal impact.


Our final pitch was well received by SCE faculty, Babson alumni, and peers, recognized for its systems-level thinking and clear connection to emerging urban policies like congestion pricing and carbon accountability. This experience reinforced my belief in mobility innovation as a pathway to social and environmental impact—and showed me how everyday frustrations, when examined through a strategic lens, can lead to scalable, future-ready solutions.


Pitch Deck