Title: Start-ups and Business Incubation:
1Start-ups and Business Incubation The
Challenges and the Opportunities Presented
to Students to Start-ups By David Schetter
Assistant Vice Chancellor for Research UCI
Office of Technology Alliances May 6, 2008
2 Challenges Facing Universities and the Role of
Start-up Companies
3Universities Need Research Funding Alternatives
- Federal funding becoming highly competitive
- State funding becoming highly restricted
- Many universities are growing rapidly,
infrastructure being stressed - Costs of research are increasing
- Conduct of research becoming more complex
- Regulatory requirements result in project delays
- Bottom line
- Research now takes longer, costs more and
competition for available funds is Intense
4Industry is a Significant Research Funding
Alternative
- Industry offers universities a degree of freedom
however, - Larger companies have moved away from funding
discovery research preferring to buy proven
technologies or start-ups that own them - Start-up companies founded on University
technologies offer a route to research funding
and technology commercialization - Requirements include
- Strong Intellectual Property
- Coordination among University offices
- Flexibility on IP terms
- Attention to Conflicts of Interest and Commitment
5 Challenges Facing Industry The Bio/Pharma
Technology Pipeline Example
6Top Ten Selling Drugs in 2003
- Total 2003 Sales - 40 Bn
- Percent of Sales off Patent by 2010 82
7Substantial Revenues at Risk Due to Patent Expiry
2003-2008
2009-2013
8Bridging Two Cultures
- UNIVERSITY
- Create and propagate knowledge for the public
good - Narrow Scope of License
- Revenue
- Academic Freedom
- Control of Intellectual Property
- Diligent Development
- COMPANY
- Financial return to investors, founders and
employees using knowledge - License
- Expense
- Confidentiality
- Control of Intellectual Property
- Commercial Flexibility and Uncertainty
9Why Should Industry Partner with Universities?
- Expands corporate RD capabilities
- Lowers RD costs and adds flexibility
- Provides access to matching grants and other
sources of non-dilutive funding - Provides access to scientific and technical
expertise - Facilitates recruiting of technical staff
- Enhances the corporate technology portfolio
- Licensing direct from University
- Start-up acquisition or strategic partnering
10Types of University/Industry Interactions
- Student Recruitment
- Internships/Externships
- Faculty Consulting
- Clinical Trials
- Technology Option or License
- Collaborative/ Sponsored Research
- Sharing of Materials, Equipment Facilities
- Industrial Consortia
- Gifts
- Affiliate Programs
- Continuing Education
11UC Commitment to Industry Partnering
- Decentralizing technology transfer to campuses
- Principles for Industry/UC partnering
- Open dissemination - Accessibility
for UC purposes - Public benefit - Fair consideration
- Informed participation - Objective
decision-making - Legal/ethical integrity - Impact on students
- Patent Policy changes and incentives
- Equity Policy
- Licensing flexibility for different industry
sectors - California Institutes for Science Innovation
- The UC Discovery Grant Program
12National Academy of Sciences Convocation, Fall
2006
- Theme U.S. global competitiveness
- Focus Rising Above the Gathering Storm report
- Challenge to participants Recommend one action
your community could take within the next six
months that would address the issues in the
Report - Attendees VP level executives from Orange County
industrial firms, civic leaders, UC Irvine
executives, community members, California
Governors Office Rep - Primary Recommendation Orange County needs more
business incubation
13Orange County Business Incubation Network (OCBIN)
- Enhancing economic growth in Orange County
- New business incubation
- Collaborative RD
- Leveraging investment capital, services and
business resources
14(No Transcript)
15OCBIN-Connections
- Secure communications for matching vetted
start-ups with VCs and qualified service
providers (screening process) - Start-ups access best in class on most
favorable terms - Sponsorships by OCBIN-Connections members with
visibility on www.OCBIN.org
16OCBIN Corporate Partners
- Technology scouting
- Incubating new company technologies
- Collaborative RD
- Accessing UCI and the UC system resources
17The Incubation Ecosystem
Incubators
Portfolio Company
18The Incubation Process
- Pre-Incubation
- Identification of Incubation Prospects
- Vetting of Incubation Prospects
- Incubation
- Seed Capital Provided by Incubator Fund
- Mentoring by Incubator Staff and Advisors
- Support from Service Providers
- Transition from Technology to Product
- Series A funding as needed
- Post Incubation
- Continued Growth
- Pursuit of Exit Strategy
19Incubation Business Models
License-in/ Acquire Technology
Sub-License Technology to Customers
Improve Technology
Productize Technology
Open-Source Provide Services
Sub-License Technology to Customers
Sell Products via Channel or Direct
20Advantages of Incubation
- Inventors Retain Control of Technology
- UCI and Inventors Increase Revenue Share
- Inventors Can Focus on Technology
- Mentors Provide Guidance
- Additional Assistance from Service Providers
- Funding Provided as Needed
- Economic Development Stays Local
21UCI Virtual Incubation Model for Start-up
Companies
- Company founded on optioned/ licensed UCI
technology and pre-seed capital - Initial non-dilutive funding SBIR, STTR and UC
Discovery Grants - Provides for early stage technology development,
leveraging UCI resources - A web of agreements between the start-up company
and UCI - Sponsored/collaborative research, license/option,
Material Transfer Agreements, Sales Service,
sublease, gifts, consulting, subleases - All standard terms with no exceptions to policy
- Management and integration of agreements is key
22UCI Virtual Incubation Model
23Virtual Incubation Model (continued)
- Conflict of Interest Review
- Without conflict there is no interest
(Conflicts can exist but must be managed) - Review of financial interests (income, stock,
board or management position) - Percent equity holding allowed for UC founder
based on stage of financing and dilution - Board membership discouraged and no tolerance for
management position can serve on the Scientific
Advisory Board but not as chair
24Virtual Incubation Model (continued)
- Sponsored Agreement Terms
- Full UCI overhead
- Improvement inventions rolled into
license/option at no additional charge - New inventions in the Field added to
license/option for one-time fee - First right to negotiate a license to new
inventions outside the Field
25Virtual Incubattion Model (continued)
- Move to Non-virtual Status
- Company does strategic partnership with larger
company including research funding, sublicense
and co-development milestones - UCI receives attributed income share of company
partnering revenue and liquidity events - Company raises next round of capital, moves out
of virtual phase to own facilities carries out
product development, production sales - UCI receives license revenue on milestones and
net sales
26Virtual Incubation with Incubators
27Take Home Messages
- Diligence on IP absolutely critical
- Solid business plan essential from R to D to
regulatory all the way through certification and
reimbursement - Assessment of University inventor current and
future projects and potential overlapping
obligations is key - Understand inventor motivations and expectations
- Understand investor motivations and expectations
- Communication, Communication, Communication
- A business incubator can provide needed services,
expertise support, often on an equity basis - Leverage University resources to the extent
possible
28Thank you for your attention! David Schetter
Assistant Vice Chancellor for Research 949.824.7
297 schetter_at_uci.edu UCI Office of Technology
Alliances www.ota.uci.edu Orange County
Business Incubation Network www.ocbin.org May
6, 2008