History & Vision

Where it all began and what we have set out to accomplish.

In the beginning...

Princeton had always been at the top of my list. My standardized test scores were average. My GPA was decent. I had never once received any recruiting mail from any of the Ivies because my PSAT and other test scores probably didn’t reach the level they were recruiting. They had no idea who I was. I was a public school kid out of Utah, half-hispanic, and ambitious. No one in the Ivy League had ever heard my name.

And that was fine.

So I went to them. I decided to let them know who I was.

My passions through high school were sports, leadership, and technology. I was well involved and had significant achievements in various activities. Through years working with the high school newspaper (Editor-in-Chief), I had acquired publishing and layout skills. Through years of breaking, building, and banging computers (President of computer club), I became proficient on both the hardware and software side of things. I particularly enjoyed web/graphic design and art. So I decided to put together a sweet-diggity-dog portfolio. My photoshop skills would be put to good use.

On the front page of my portfolio I transposed my picture into a photo of the Princeton campus—beautiful gothic arches behind me—hundreds of years of tradition at my fingertips. I put the Princeton logo on my sweatshirt, and in big block letters above the picture, “Dean Fred, I’m ready to be a tiger.”

I put myself out on a limb. This was extremely risky.

The rest of the pages in my portfolio (probably about 12 total) included everything and anything about me. It had all sorts of funky pictures of me doing what I enjoyed. It talked about my family. It spoke of my hobbies, interests and passions. It gave samples of my design work, my writing, and my photography. It truly painted the picture of who I was. And I sent it to them.

I wasn’t sure if it would make a difference. And I still don't know if it really did. But the bottom line is that I got the “Yes” letter. And I’m now a Princeton tiger, class of ’09.

I’m not saying that students need to create and send lengthy portfolios to get into their dream school. In reality, some admissions officers discourage this. However, this experience in personalizing the admissions process caused me to reflect on the current process and ultimately, it's what inspired me to start Zinch. I let Princeton know who I was. The application itself didn’t give justice to what I could do or who I was. So I created something that did. I basically knocked on Princeton’s door and said, “This is who I am. Take me or leave me.”

To be honest, there isn’t a clear process or method to do what I did—to adequately show who you are and what you’re all about. It doesn’t exist.

Most colleges and universities use practice exams and standardized tests as a method of their recruiting. They'll go to The College Board (administor of the AP and SAT tests) or ACT and ask for the students who got above a certain score. From there they'll start recruiting these students.

This was the inequality that I recognized. What about the students who don't take these standardized tests? What about the students who aren't great test-takers (yet still have amazing abilities)? What about the students who lack the resources and coaching to do well on these tests? With the current system, so many great students are left under the radar, undiscovered and unrecruited.

Zinch is a tool that allows for high school students to showcase their talents, skills and passions to colleges and universities, well in advance of the actual application process. On the other side, admissions officers can do comprehensive searches through our database to generate a list of students that match their specified criteria--and then start recruiting them.

Recruitment efforts by colleges can finally be based on more than test scores. Students are so much more than that. Like me, wanting to showcase my abilities to Princeton, students from all over the world can now do the same to their dream schools--in a way that's almost effortless yet incredibly effective to admissions officers.

And that is why I founded Zinch: to level the playing field and to provide a means by which individuality and greatness can be extracted from everyone during the college admissions process. Every student will now have an equal opportunity to basically say, “This is me. Love me, hate me, recruit me, or trash me. This is who I am.”

Mick Hagen
Princeton University, '09
Founder

The Zinch Vision

Students

Many students are overwhelmed by the college admissions process — and with good reason. Students have over 4,000 colleges and universities from which to choose, multiple standardized tests to prepare for and take, and numerous applications to fill out. The process begins too early for some, causing anxiety and a quest for overachievement and perfection. For others, it begins too late leaving little time to prepare for this important process. The pressure of college visits, college fairs, homework, tests, athletics, extra-curricular activities and part time jobs are all juggled by today's high school students, while the some of the operations of the college admissions process magnify and exacerbate this stress.

Students lack control and visibility in this process. Zinch empowers all students to better view their options and present themselves. It allows students to actively let any college in America know who they are and to show what they bring to the world. Zinch is a movement for students to show colleges that they are not the 27 or 1860 they're currently seen as; they have names, passions, and background differences that make them unique and desirable to colleges. Zinch is thus a tool by which colleges can make better recruitment decisions based on better information. It's a win-win.

Colleges & Universities

Colleges and universities have long recognized the need for a greater reach in their recruiting efforts. There has been significant movement in the last few years: over 700 universities have dropped the requirement to take and submit an ACT or SAT score and big-name universities like Harvard and Princeton have dropped their early admissions programs. "We think this will produce a fairer process, because the existing process has been shown to advantage those who are already advantaged," said Derek Bok, the interim president of Harvard.

Whether through targeting minority students or those from diverse backgrounds, universities are anxiously engaged in finding better methods for recruiting. Currently, due to lack of reliable alternatives, colleges and universities depend heavily on test scores to recruit high school students. Unfortunately, these practices inherently filter out many students. First of all, has the student taken a college entrance exam? How did he or she score? Was that score indicative of their ability to succeed at a college level? Our fight is not with entrance exams; we recognize that this is one method to begin a selection process. We argue that this is one among many criteria that profile a student and admissions recruitment should reflect this. Further, unless students have resources, including knowledgeable college guidance counselors, parents or college bound peers, access to college campuses or books, they fall short in the college race.

As college admissions become increasingly competitive, the need for better information earlier in the process is imperative. With better methods, the gap between privileged and underprivileged will decrease.

Zinch

Zinch levels the playing field by providing all high school students with the leverage they need to thoughtfully engage in the college admissions process without the need for expensive resources. Zinch shines light on those students hidden in obscurity and adds fire to those already burning their candle. On the most basic level, we believe high school-age students to be, regardless of circumstance, champions in embryo. We believe that many students have abilities and talents best developed in a college or university setting. The question is whether or not that picture of potential can be extracted for a college admission officer to see. Zinch exists to reveal that ability. By utilizing Zinch, colleges can recruit students with complete information. Students can shine for all that they are. This is our mission. This is how we seek to level the playing field.

Zinch asks students to: "Showcase yourself. Be discovered. Don't make college admissions a passive process, hoping that somehow, colleges in America will find you. Shout aloud your dream university; then go get it. You are more than a test score. Find them. Show them. Personalize the process."