UC outshines Ivy League schools graduating billion-dollar unicorn founders

Entrepreneur magazine says UC outranks Stanford, Harvard, Yale in facilitating tech start-ups

While the University of Cincinnati may not belong to the Ivy League schools, it proudly boasts its own league — the "Unicorn League."

A new study found that UC left prestigious rivals such as Yale, Harvard and MIT behind with its track record of producing successful unicorn-launching alums, as reported by Entrepreneur magazine.

The term unicorn is given to companies valued at more than $1 billion that are not publicly traded. As of January 2024, there are more than 1,300 globally active unicorns, as reported by PitchBook.com.

UC celebrates 11 unicorn founders

A business professor at Stanford, Ilya Strebulaev, recently conducted a report ranking the top universities according to the percentage of unicorns associated with them.

According to Strebulaev’s report, founders of a U.S. startup who studied or worked at UC are 3.3 times more likely to achieve unicorn status than average.

The report lists the odds ratio of schools shadowing UC in producing a unicorn:

  •        UC — 3.3 times more likely
  •        Yale and Vanderbilt University tied — 2.0
  •        Stanford University — 1.6
  •        University of California, Berkeley — 1.5
This research study only reaffirms what the University of Cincinnati has long known to be true: That UC is a special place that prepares remarkably special people to compete at the highest level.

Ryan Hays, UC executive vice president and chief Innovation and strategy officer

The startup culture is unique, requiring a blend of ingenuity and business acumen to identify market opportunities along with a robust group of mentors and financiers for support. 

“This research study only reaffirms what the University of Cincinnati has long known to be true: That UC is a special place that prepares remarkably special people to compete at the highest level," Ryan Hays, UC executive vice president and chief innovation and strategy officer, said. "There’s a reason we named our strategic direction Next Lives Here. It perfectly captures the forward-leaning, innovation-driven, grit-fueled, next-minded boldness that comes with being a Bearcat.”

Bearcats turned unicorn

Creating a business as prosperous as these demands immense dedication, hard work, intelligence and a dash of luck. Yet, as Strebulaev’s report illustrates, the success rate of those attending UC undoubtedly enhances one’s odds of unicorn status.

The UC 1819 Innovation HubTechnology Transfer Office and Venture Lab pre-accelerator program forge an entrepreneurial ecosystem catalyzing ideas from conception to market success. With abundant resources and creative support, tomorrow's unicorns can thrive in the Cincinnati Innovation District, often termed as the Center for the Silicon Heartland.

These 11 Bearcat unicorns share a common origin — they all attended the UC where they were equipped with an entrepreneurial blueprint that propelled them on a trajectory of founding billion-dollar startups.

Featured image at top: University of Cincinnati campus. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand

Impact Lives Here

The University of Cincinnati is leading public urban universities into a new era of innovation and impact. Our faculty, staff and students are saving lives, changing outcomes and bending the future in our city's direction. Next Lives Here.

Related Stories

1

New approach could treat cancer by rearranging tumor cell structures

November 10, 2025

The University of Cincinnati’s Jiajie Diao, PhD, and colleagues have published new research showing a proof of concept that rearranging the location of lipid droplets within cells can increase the effectiveness of cell starvation, making it a potential cancer treatment. The research was published as the November cover story in the journal Trends in Biotechnology.

3

Two University of Cincinnati colleges benefit from $4 million gift

November 7, 2025

University of Cincinnati alumni Mohammad H. Qayoumi, MS ’79, MS ’80, MBA ’84, PhD ’83 and Najia Karim, BS ’82, MEd ’83, RD, have made a $4 million gift supporting two of the university’s colleges. A donation from the couple establishes a fund and an endowed chair at the College of Engineering and Applied Science, as well as an endowed chair at the College of Allied Health Sciences.