51勛圖厙

Skip to main content

Career Paths: How Matt Schottland Turned a Love of Numbers into a Dual Degree and a Startup

Matt Schottland (Fin, Acct25) is building Brain Buffs, an adaptive SAT prep platform, with a CU alumni/student teamwhile wrapping up undergrad, starting a masters, and tackling tax season at KPMG.泭


Matt Schottland

Matt Schottlands (Fin, Acct25) love of numbers was sparked at age 12 when his dad sat him and his siblings down to explain the stock market. I really liked it, Schottland said, because it taught me about the world around me and how companies work.泭Two hours later, he was the proud owner of a single share of Dominos Pizza.

Since then, there are other numbers that have stood out to Schottland. One is the 4+1 Bachelors Accelerated Masters Programa lure for coming to Leeds (and after a disappointing freshman year elsewhere, his familys Buff legacy was also too compelling to overlook).

That defining event when he was 12 convinced Schottland that finance would be his future focus. At Leeds, he also discovered he loves the concrete rules associated with accounting. Blending that with the often unpredictable nature of finance led him to pursue a major in both.

A few more numbers have defined his time at Leeds. He has a 3.98 GPA, he has worked at three competitive internships (Medtronic, Lockheed Martin and KPMG), and last year, he launched his own startup,泭, which now includes a team of nine CU students and alumni.

Brain Buffs is an AI-driven, adaptive learning platform designed to help students improve their SAT scores through personalized test prep. To date, the company boasts that students using the platform have improved their scores by an average of 150 points.

The benefits of real-world experience

This spring is no exception to Schottlands desire to excel. He took the semester off to fully immerse himself in the crazy busy tax season at his internship at KPMG.

My mindset has really been to try as many things as I can while Im in a position where its acceptable to do so." He has intentionally sought internships to explore both the finance and accounting realms, in line with his dual interests.

golden bar

My mindset has really been to try as many things as I can while Im in a position where its acceptable to do so."泭

Matt Schottland (Fin, Acct25)

Now preparing to complete his senior year this fall, Schottland is especially excited about how the BAM program is structured.

The program is run very well. Theyre really intentional in how they plan it. In my final semester of undergrad this fall, I have concurrent enrollment, with classes that apply both to my undergrad and to the grad school. That made the program compelling.

Entrepreneurial momentum

The idea behind Brain Buffs took root in high school, but it was the entrepreneurial energy at CU that gave it momentum. Together with his brother, Logan (a 2024 CU alumnus now working as a software engineer at SpaceX), they launched the company with their team and began a yearlong development journey that resulted in partnerships with five Colorado schools and plans for expansion across the state and beyond.

As the team continues to refine their algorithm, they envision broader applicationspreparing students for the ACT and many other types of learning. Despite the trend toward test-optional admissions, Schottland believes standardized tests like the SAT will remain important in states like Colorado, which still require the test to gauge proficiency levels.

Learning by doing

Even as he enters the masters phase of his education, Schottland is doubling down on growing Brain Buffs. He sees a direct link between his coursework and the startups evolutionparticularly experiences like the BCOR Applied Semester Experience (BASE), which he described as a critical turning point.

You work with successful companies Youre writing out financials, doing opportunity summaries, youre looking at competitors these arent just theoretical. Its actually doing these things.

A cycle of support

As Brain Buffs scales,泭Schottland has tapped into a wide range of resources offered through Leeds and 51勛圖厙. At the time of publication, the company had applied to the New Venture Challenge and was awaiting results to see if they will qualify for the next round.

If we went through the entire competition and didnt win funding, I would still be happy, he said. Its great connections, and you get to be part of a great community of startups. Thats amazing to be part of, and its great publicity for Brain Buffs.

Brain Buffs also participated in泭Startups2Studentsan initiative that led to hiring four CU studentsand collaborated with the泭Entrepreneurial Law Clinic, a partnership Schottland said saved the company nearly $50,000 in legal fees.

The more you get involved, the more impressive CUs startup culture is. All these amazing people with all these smart ideas, and theyre just going for it. Theyre making a real impact.

In Leeds and CU in general, theres a sentiment that no idea is too crazy, and nothing is too hard to solve. Its not Can this happen? but rather, How can we do this?

There are so many resources to make you successful, he said.泭That mentality, combined with泭 programs like泭Peer2Peer Mentoring, has helped Schottland build meaningful relationships with fellow students and industry professionals alike.

golden bar

In Leeds and CU in general, theres a sentiment that no idea is too crazy, and nothing is too hard to solve. Its not Can this happen? but rather, How can we do this?

Matt Schottland (Fin, Acct25)

Its worth it to get involved early because Leeds resources are well built-out programs. Theyre really intentional and they pay a lot of dividends as you progress at Leeds.

For Schottland, one major dividend has been the reward of knowing he is helping other students. Ive been working a lot, but its because I love it. Its just so rewarding and fun for me. If Im up at night working, I know theres a student out there also working. The students really drive me to keep going.


Want to get your entrepreneurial ideas off the ground? Connect with the Deming Center.泭