An Entrepreneurial Spirit
A native of the West African country of Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast), Mory emigrated to the U.S. with his family when he was 15. At Penn State, he was a civil engineering major and a national champion boxer his senior year. The tenacity and drive required for such a feat has carried into his post-college life, as have two Penn State Values: responsibility and community.
After moving around the country due to his line of work, Mory landed in Arizona where he currently works for Arizona Public Service as a Senior Regulatory Affairs Consultant at the Palo Verde nuclear power plant. He founded his start-up company on the side, which gave him the connections in China to launch KORVEX, a new company that is serving as a bridge between Chinese factories making facemasks and U.S. medical personnel who need them.
“I wanted a company name that sounded medical, but I also grew up on Japanese anime and American comic books, so the name is based on Superman’s father’s birth name, which is Cor-Vex. I just respelled it,” he says with a laugh.
Things moved quickly. Within a week of having the idea, Mory had a website up and running.
“I’ve been communicating with the suppliers in China and negotiating with them to get quality products for the best price,” he says. “I picked some N95 masks from select factories and carefully verified the U.S. FDA and NIOSH certification of the manufacturers, because only those masks are officially approved for use in hospitals. I’m also focusing on getting them shipped express for free.”
One of Mory’s sounding boards throughout the process was Smeal’s Shawn Clark, the Michael J. Farrell Endowed Professor for Entrepreneurship. Clark teaches the Corporate Innovation and Entrepreneurship course Mory is currently taking through the Online MBA Program. The course curriculum is like nectar to a bee for Mory, creating the ideal environment for him to strengthen his entrepreneurial skills and take on this ambitious venture.
“One of our early topics in class was how to identify niches, gaps or opportunities where a start-up can play a role,” Clark says. “In fact, one of the exercises was problem identification – look for a problem and then figure out a solution. Mory has done exactly that with KORVEX.”
“Over the course of several weeks,” Clark continues, “Mory emailed me a series of business ideas, which was fascinating because usually someone will have a single passion and keep working on it but Mory’s ideas were serial and differentiated. The next thing I know he’s asking me to review his website and using his Chinese contacts to buy masks. In our current world situation, he recognized quickly that there was an opportunity for him to help.”
“Dr. Clark was very supportive of what I was doing,” Mory says. “I consulted with him often as I was working through my ideas and eventually landed on KORVEX. He gave me great feedback throughout.”