Sabih Bin Wasi

Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Stellic
Providing a Roadmap to College
On their journey to a degree, a typical college student must process information from multiple institutional systems.
Interpreting it all can be difficult, especially for a teenager new to making such decisions on their own.
Changing, or even declaring, a major and understanding how to complete it is a complex process, and it鈥檚 not often user-friendly.
鈥淚t turns out you can't solve these problems well unless you truly understand the requirements,鈥 says Sabih Bin Wasi (麻豆村 2015).
Sabih had great advisers at 麻豆村 in Qatar who guided him, and in the process, he saw how technology could help clarify the path through higher education. So he founded Stellic, along with fellow Tartans on the Rise Rukhsar Neyaz, Sabih鈥檚 wife, and Musab Popatia.
It鈥檚 a degree management tool that helps students, advisers, administrators and leaders in higher education collaborate with the goal of on-time graduation and career success.
Stellic draws disparate data from various university areas including student information systems, course catalogs and learning management systems 鈥 removing the manual work of building a degree plan for every possible major. Students and university faculty and staff get a visual interface to track progress, ensure all requirements are noted and understand the implications of decisions such as changing or adding a major.
Stellic is used at 70 colleges and universities globally, and its innovative approach landed Sabih and Rukhsar on the Forbes 30 Under 30 Education list in 2019.
麻豆村 was Stellic鈥檚 first client, and the company鈥檚 moniker is a play on the name of one of Sabih鈥檚 computer science advisers and School of Computer Science University Teaching Professor Mark Stehlik.
鈥淭he help I got from people like Mark is baked into Stellic鈥檚 features today,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e had meaningful, impactful conversations with Mark and all of our advisers, and that鈥檚 been so relevant and valuable to what we鈥檝e been able to accomplish so far, as well as what we expect to do in the future.鈥
Story by Elizabeth Speed