INDIANAPOLIS — Venture capitalists are always looking to invest in the next big business idea. A competition proved that those ideas can sometimes come from the minds of teenagers.
The Innovate WithIN competition invited high school students across the state to present their business ideas for a $25,000 grand prize.

17-year-old Raina Maiga and 18-year-old Truman Graves took home the $25,000 with Compleyes.AI, their idea to help manufacturing businesses know and respect environmental compliance laws.
"People may think this is just a fun student project, but we want people to see this as a real product where they can put money behind it," said Graves.
"Two years ago, I wouldn't say a word if Bill Gates was in front of me," said Maiga. "Right now, by the end of that meeting, I would have thrown him two questions."

Maiga and Graves attended different high schools but developed their business partnership under the dome of the State Capitol.
"Raina and I actually met at the Statehouse while working on environmental regulations with state legislators," Graves said.
Their partnership came full circle. Maiga and Graves presented Compleyes.AI to leaders such as Governor Mike Braun during the competition.
"You really have to balance that you want people to help you and believe in you because you're young, but not count you out because you're young," Maiga said. "To come out on top shows the product and the vision is what people want."

They will go their separate ways after their big win. Maiga will start her first year at Cornell University and will continue to develop Compleyes.AI with the $25,000 investment.
"This is one of the top engineering schools in the country," Maiga said. "Students there are building AI technologies we couldn't dream of."
Graves will enroll at Purdue University and study mechanical engineering, but will not leave his newfound business background behind.
"Engineers solve problems, they create something, but you have to be ready to sell that. If you're solving a problem but you can't convince someone to actually buy it, you're not solving a problem."
-
Reports: Purdue athletic director Mike Bobinski set to retire
Purdue athletic director Mike Bobinski plans to retire at the end of the year, according to multiple reports.
Community Health Cancer Center expansion taking shape on Indy’s south side
An expansion to the Community Health MD Anderson Health Center on the south side of Indianapolis is starting to take shape. It’s been just over a year since a fire at the construction site.
Indianapolis Cultural Trail celebrates 2 decades of success
City leaders on Wednesday marked 20 years of biking, running, and walking on the Indianapolis Cultural Trail.Thousands of lead service lines replaced in Near Northwest Riverside community
Crews from Citizens Energy Group are focused on replacing lead service lines in Near Northwest Riverside, a community where 97 percent of homes have them.