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E-Cell OC
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: 23
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Comments

  • The pain point is so universal that it almost sells itself. My only question: how will you make sure it stays alive after the initial excitement? A lot of platforms die from inactivity once the novelty wears off.
    • E-Cell OC
      Great question, Harsh — sustainability is where most campus apps die.
      Our approach: treat Inquiro as infrastructure, not a fad. We’re aligning it with research credit programs and faculty performance metrics so it has institutional weight. Also, every successful match becomes a mini-story — and storytelling fuels retention far more than features do.
  • The concept of connecting students with research opportunities and mentors is excellent, but the platform's success hinges entirely on quality control. What concrete mechanisms are in place to rigorously vet mentors for genuine expertise and commitment, and to ensure the listed research projects are substantive, not just low-effort tasks? Without a clear, robust filtering process, the 'impact' you promise will quickly dilute.
    • E-Cell OC
      Couldn’t have put it better, Akarsh. Vetting is everything.
      We’re implementing a multi-layer filter — faculty verification (through institutional email), project depth scoring (AI + peer review), and student feedback after completion. It’s a loop that ensures only genuine, substantive projects stay visible. Quantity fades; credibility compounds.
  • Great work Charvi, Inquiro sounds amazing
    • E-Cell OC
      Thanks a lot, Vedh! It’s just the beginning — the goal is to make research discovery as natural as finding a club or event on campus. Appreciate the encouragement
  • This idea nails a real campus problem — making research accessible, matching students by skills, and bringing fairness into the process. The integrity tracking especially stands out — this can really change how opportunities are distributed.
  • Brilliant idea! You’ve nailed the student–professor gap with scoped projects, smart AI matching, and integrity tracking. Clear, fair, and action-oriented.
  • Inquiro sounds like a game-changer for building a strong research culture on campus. Adding a mentorship option where seniors can guide juniors would make it even more helpful and impactful.
  • I really like the idea of bridging the gap between students and professors! A useful feature could be an in-app calendar to help students and professors sync schedules and deadlines easily, making sure everyone stays on track.
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