Campus Ideaz

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E-Cell
Inquiro — Seek Research. Find Mentors. Build Impact.

 

Let’s be real. Students want to get into research. Professors want reliable students. And yet… nothing connects.

I’ve seen it firsthand: every other student I know wants research exposure but has no idea where to start. Meanwhile, professors are constantly hunting for dependable students to handle simulations, data prep, or literature reviews. Right now, this is a broken system. Opportunities vanish in random emails or closed WhatsApp groups, and the result is a massive waste of talent and time.

So here’s the solution: INQUIRO — from the Latin “to inquire, to seek.”

Inquiro is a campus-first platform that uses AI to solve this disconnect, literally bringing the seekers together with the knowers. Professors can post scoped projects (2–10 weeks, not a lifetime commitment). Students build profiles with their skills—Python, MATLAB, writing, and poster design. The AI engine handles the matching. No more begging. No more “sir, any openings?” spam. Just clarity.

What makes Inquiro different?

This isn’t LinkedIn for job hunters. This isn’t ResearchGate for post-docs. This is built for us—undergraduates who want to build, learn, and make an impact now.

- Smart Matching: Professors post projects and students showcase their skills. Inquiro’s AI does the matching, connecting the right student to the right project without the guesswork.

- AI Recommendations: Inquiro doesn’t just match; it nudges. Students get personalised suggestions like, “You did ML in biology, check out this genomics project.” Faculty get insights like, “These 5 students are strong in data viz but haven’t been utilised this semester.”

- Integrity Tracking: Every contribution is logged. Our platform tracks who is genuinely putting in the work, so recognition—including co-authorship—is based on real input, not favouritism.

Why it matters

I’ve been a student desperately hunting for work that matters. I’ve also heard professors complain they can’t find consistent helpers. Inquiro bridges that gap—making research accessible, fair, and, honestly, way more exciting.

Students get exposure, stronger resumes, and the confidence to tackle bigger challenges. Faculty gain reliable assistants, resulting in faster progress and increased publications. The university grows a vibrant research culture—and becomes known as the place where research actually happens.

So, if you had Inquiro tomorrow, what’s the very first feature you’d want?

Votes: 17
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Comments

  • Excellent concept that directly solves a clear pain point for students and faculty. The primary criticism is that its success hinges on overcoming the major hurdle of convincing busy professors to adopt yet another new platform.
  • This is honestly a necessity. Many people lack exposure and don't even know where to start off when it comes to experience. Having something like this to guide you at least until you get a decent foothold is something so many people desperately need.
  • Man Ive always been looking for something like this. Sir, any openings? hahha too real. Students need good research experience, and profs need reliable students. Cold mailing is out of season, its either this or a pigeon. This could genuinely transform how research is done. Im looking forward to seeing the integrity tracking live. Awesome work, Charvi!
  • This is a great idea the AI-driven matching and integrity tracking make it truly stand out, ensuring fairness, reliability, and well-deserved recognition for everyone.
  • This seems like a fantastic idea! The way Inquiro connects students and professors to create a vibrant research culture is a great solution to a common problem. The features like Smart Matching, AI Recommendations, and Integrity Tracking appear to be very effective in building a system where every contribution is valued and students gain valuable experience.
  • Inquiro addresses a real gap on campus by connecting students who want meaningful research experience with professors seeking reliable support. If I had access to it tomorrow, the first feature I’d want is a way to see projects that align closely with my skills and availability.
  • Inquiro is a smart solution connecting students and professors, making research opportunities fair and accessible. The skill-based matching and integrity tracking are excellent; it could be even better by adding ways to keep students consistently engaged throughout projects.
  • Inquiro nails a real, often overlooked gap: connecting eager undergraduates with professors who need dependable help. The campus-first angle makes it unique compared to generic platforms, and the scoped projects idea lowers the barrier to entry for students. AI-driven matching and integrity tracking give it fairness and scalability, while nudging features make it proactive rather than just a passive board. The big challenge will be adoption—professors need to trust it, and students need to stay consistent but if piloted well, this could reshape research culture at universities.
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