Alumnus launches new startup at CU to inspire climate action

Scott King (ElEngr鈥85) admits that the idea for his newest business venture 鈥渟tarted out kind of dark.鈥

In 2018, King sold ReadyTalk, the communication services company he had founded with his brother Dan King (ChemEngr鈥82; MBA鈥89), and retired early. But as the longtime entrepreneur was learning how to be retired, he was also becoming concerned about how former President Donald Trump鈥檚 administration was approaching climate change.

鈥淧ulling out of the Paris Climate Accord, rolling back emissions, decimating the EPA,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou just watched one thing after another.鈥


The Super Zero team from CU 麻豆影院 developed a model home to help people relate their home to the power it consumes. It gives the user the ability to control the energy and see what it means to be carbon zero.

Then came the COVID-19 pandemic and the contentious 2020 election. King said he started to feel hopeless about the country鈥檚 ability to tackle complex issues and started building a shelter in his house to protect his family.听 听 听

鈥淚 woke up one day and I鈥檓 like, 鈥榃hat are you doing? You鈥檙e designing a bunker in your house. That鈥檚 not good,鈥欌 King said. 鈥淚鈥檓 a really optimistic person, and I thought there鈥檚 got to be something I can do besides just taking care of my family.鈥

So he looked at what he could personally bring to the table when it came to combating climate change.

鈥淚 had a little bit of money because we sold ReadyTalk, and Dan and I are doing fine. And I know technology, and I know entrepreneurship,鈥 he said.

King also knows CU 麻豆影院. In spring 2020, he was co-teaching an entrepreneurship course in the Leeds School of Business. When they transitioned to remote learning, he gave students the option to pivot their business ideas to something that could help their community during the pandemic.

He was heartened by how many took him up on the offer, and he realized CU 麻豆影院 was the perfect place to center his new business venture, which he named Mission Zero.

His goal with the company is to harness the knowledge of faculty, passion of students and growing interest from alumni and the business community to engage people in changing their behavior on climate change 鈥 from small, everyday actions to how they choose elected officials.听 听

King also wants to help make connections across the university between all the people working on climate change issues. He鈥檚 been mentoring two electrical and computer engineering senior design teams, working to plan a campus climate conference, providing seed funding for new projects and meeting with anyone who鈥檚 willing to talk about opportunities.

鈥淭his is a startup, and it is literally being incubated at CU. We鈥檙e leaning on students and faculty and advisors and trying to get engagement. Now we鈥檙e moving on to business leaders, and we鈥檒l see if it goes,鈥 King said. 鈥淏ut, yeah. I鈥檓 not retired anymore.鈥

A student team sponsored by King shows off its carbon-zero home design at a project expo
A team sponsored by King shows off its carbon-zero home design at a project expo in December.