Title: Overview of Risk Management in University Technology Transfer
1Overview of Risk Management in University
Technology Transfer
- David N. Allen, Ph.D.
- Associate Vice President for Technology Transfer
- University of Colorado System
- david.allen_at_CU.edu
- 303 735 1688
- September, 2007
Knowledge
Innovation
Technology
2The Presentation Today
- Overview of technology transfer
- Elements of risk in technology transfer
- Risk management issues and approaches
- Conclusions and take home points
3(No Transcript)
4The Technology Transfer Process
Research (creation of the idea) Invention
disclosure (submitted to TTO) Intellectual
Property (IP) assessment (protection, technical
and commercial feasibility) IP protection
(initially a provisional patent application and
then further prosecution) Marketing and Proof of
Concept Option then License (to an Existing
Company or Start-Up Company) Product and Market
Development Commercial Sales (by
Licensee/Sublicensee) Revenue to CU (royalty,
milestone payments, equity liquidations) Revenue
distribution (inventors, their labs, Campus and
System)
5Technology Transfer Performance Metrics CU as an
Example
- Fiscal Year 02-3 03-4 04-5 05-6 06-7
- Invention disclosures 124 147 177 198 254
- Patent apps filed 82 100 139 125 140
- Options and licenses 34 47 59 57 75
- Exclusive option/licenses 13 19 22
36 35 - Revenue in MM 3.1 5.8 21.7 20.6
24.0 - Start-up companies 6 9 9 10
10 - does not include revenue derived from legal
settlements which in FY2003-4 amounted to 28.1M,
- in FY2004-5 6.7M, in FY 2005-6 .7M
- and .5M in 2006-7
6The Role of Technology Transfer Offices?
- Work with investigators to identify and assess IP
- Work with investigators to secure IP rights
through research contracts, Material Transfer
Agreements and related agreements - Decide to protect, license, release to public or
return IP to inventor - Supervise obtaining legal protection, negotiate,
execute and manage licenses and distribute net
receipts inventor(s) named on a patent receive
X of the revenue derived from the patent - Conduct government compliance
7Universities Claim to IP Ownership
- Key Provision of 1980 Bayh-Dole Act university
receives title to inventions created from
research supported by federal funding - Every university has an IP policy typical
covered individuals - Employees of university who create inventions
- Inventions derived fro a grant or contract
obligation - Inventions derived from substantial use of
university resources - Students often exempted (except as part of above)
8What Do Universities Want from Licensees?
- A true commitment to further develop and
eventually commercialize the technology. - An understanding of university values and
constraints, e.g., publication and Bayh-Dole. - A fair price, uncomplicated royalty terms and an
opportunity to share in the upside. - Reasonable terms for acquiring new IP.
- A role for the faculty inventor.
- To retrieve the IP if licensee doesnt produce.
- Reasonable mitigation of risks.
9Elements of Legal Risk in a License Agreement
- The basic proposition an arms length
transaction exchanging rights for economic
consideration - Key elements of risk in a a license contract
- Issues with the grant of rights previous
contractual obligations, exclusivity/non-exclusivi
ty, field of use, patent rights, know-how, future
rights - Retained rights for government and research
- Payments earned royalties and sublicense
royalties, annual and milestone fees, - Patent administration and enforcement
10Elements of Government Regulatory Risk in Tech
Transfer
- The basic proposition government empowerment of
IP comes with obligations to the government - Key elements of regulatory risk
- Bayh-Dole reporting and other obligations
- Conflict of Interest (hens and fox analogy)
- Export control laws
- Open records laws
- Animal experimentation
- Human clinical trials
11Elements of Research Risk Impacting Tech Transfer
- The basic proposition research compliance is an
academic affairs issue but impacts technology
transfer - The research environment risk
- Improper use of others IP (material transferred
from industry) - Inappropriate IP terms in Sponsored Research,
Material Transfer and Confidentiality Agreements - Agreements signed by faculty who do not have
delegated authority - Improper use of confidential and/or proprietary
data - Expropriation of IP (by employees and by
companies)
12Elements of Intellectual Property Risk Impacting
Tech Transfer
- The basic proposition it takes five plus tears
to be awarded a patent, by then the technology is
often cold - The IP risk environment
- Public disclosure of inventions
- Incorrect inventorship
- Complicated royalty distribution issues such as
with different software creators over different
versions of software - Embedded third party software in university
developed software
13Elements of Financial Risk in Tech Transfer
- The basic proposition payment for right to
make, use, and sell IP - Key elements of financial risk
- Patent infringement litigation
- Incomplete payment by licensee
- Timely and accurate office processing
- Form of equity and liquidation terms
- Payment for all inventors
- Funds to support litigation
14Risk Management Issues
- Basic legal protection inability of an injured
party to pierce the license iron curtain
liability between user and university - The opportunity cost risk of missed technology
commercialization - The balance between transferring risk (control)
to the licensee and accepting risk (control) - The special risks of working with start-ups and
small businesses - Risk of working with known litigious companies
15Risk Management Features of a License
- Indemnification by licensee and not by university
- Very limited warranties and reps by university
- Commercial diligence defined
- Examination of licensee financial records (audit)
- Licensee insurance requirement
- License assignment approval
- Compliance with the law and choice of law
- Dispute resolution arrangements
- Contract termination
16Other Risk Management Approaches
- Fiscal responsibility reporting and assurances by
TTO principal officer - Fiscal control procedures
- Audits of large unusual transactions and yearly
audits of affiliated entities - Best practice monitoring and training to those
practices - Transparency of performance metric reporting and
budgeting
17Conclusions and Take-home Points
- The relationship between the license and
university is as important as the contract - Competent tech transfer staff and best practice
procedures are essential - The relationship between the tech transfer office
and university legal counsel must be positive - Administration wants a proactive tech transfer
function, which should be coupled with proactive
academic compliance procedures - The tech transfer office should not perform
research compliance responsibility is disclosure - There is no such thing as a prefect, risk free
license