Title: Assistant Professor and Program Director
1Vinnova Project on the Entrepreneurial University
Industry-University Alliances Defining Best
Practice Mechanisms and Models for Universities
to support Growth Through Innovation in
Industry-Collaboration
Sigvald.Harryson_at_hik.se Assistant Professor and
Program Director Project Managers
Sandra.Kliknaite_at_hik.se Rafal.Dudkowski_at_hik.se
Stockholm, December 1st, 2005
2Agenda
- Executive Summary
- Ten Key Questions with Answers
- Four Emerging Models for Industry-University
Collaboration
3Executive Summary
4Executive Summary some quotes by CTOs
- Our problems are very practical and not often
fulfilling the academic requirements in terms of
scientific relevance as imposed by the
universities - It is difficult or impossible for universities to
keep the results of our collaboration
confidential, so we are forced to limit
collaboration to areas that are nice to know
and we are not able to work jointly on truly
strategic areas - Students do not have any understanding of our
business-reality so their start-up time before
really adding any value to our business is too
long - Academic researchers often lack the project
management skills to act as reliable partners in
a business-context - What we need is to get a few solid answers to one
clearly defined problem, but academic research
more often aims at developing a long list of
additional questions as interesting spin-offs
from the originally defined problem
5Companies covered so far
- Akzo Nobel
- Bang Olufsen ICEpower
- Gambro
- SCA
- Swisscom
- Telia Sonera
- Tetra Pak
- Additional Input can/will be collected from
- Alfa Laval
- BMW
- Volvo
- Procter Gamble with ASTAR in Singapore
6Ten Key Questions with Answers
71) What is the best model for University
Collaboration?
- Focused collaboration in defined problem areas
involving academic researchers ideally from
several disciplines (Telia-Sonera Business,
Psychology and Technology) - Concrete projects, executed by joint
company-academic project oriented teams, tapping
the potential of Professors - Coaching diploma works of internalized Master,
Licentiate and PhD students, who are focused on
finding new solutions to a specific
business-problem
82) What are the key characteristics of successful
models?
- Mutual interest in making a difference through
breakthrough results - Full time dedicated persons from both sides to
accomplish mutually shared goals which requires
new incentive models for academic professionals - University researchers with strong dedication to
understand challenges and problems faced by the
company in question - Balancing fair IP agreements with open sharing of
results
93) What are the most critical factors that
influence the selection of university partners?
- Demonstrated world-class knowledge with critical
mass (incl. equipment) in a certain subject that
is strategically important to the company in
question - Strong past experience in successful
collaboration with companies and ability to speak
the same languages - Ability of the academics to compromise in the
creation of joint solutions pragmatism and
flexibility as opposed to perfection - Geographic proximity
104) What are the barriers and challenges that
reduce the impact of university collaboration?
- Lack of understanding of the driving forces in
the business environment by universities, pure
academic mindsets of professors with limited
experience in business collaboration - Using the same words but with totally different
underlying mindsets, meaning structures and
intentions often causing inability to translate
industry problems into academic problems - Lack of project management skills from the
Universitys side - IPR ownership and publishing conflicts
115) What are the main-enablers that increase the
impact of university collaboration?
- Selection of the right problem, which is
business-relevant, and stimulating for the
academic partners as well while being easy to
implement - Defining joint targets, making those targets
explicit and monitoring how they are reached - Proximity of units and/or co-location of
researchers with honest communication and social
competence to enable a genuine dialogue and build
further joint interest in the topic - Systematic and transparent reporting and follow
up on milestone-based progress
126) What are the most important deliverables of
the collaboration (short and long-term)?
- Short Term
- Assessing the impact and viability of a concept
or a technology - Know-how transfer through regular meetings or
co-location - Long Term
- Strengthening of the scientific reputation and
brand (Gambro) - Recruiting ready-made PhDs with a demonstrated
track-record - Build-up of knowledge in a defined area in which
the company has no possibility to do this based
on internal resources alone
137) What are the most important factors in the
behavior of a university in order to be perceived
as an attractive collaboration partner?
- Demonstrated ability to understand and work on
business-driven problems with companies - Strong organizational and project management
skills - Ability to network and build trust with company
partners including honesty about delays or
inability to deliver the expected results - Willingness to support the implementation of a
solution so as to make a business impact
148) How can companies influence the behavior of
universities to adopt approaches that favor
seamless collaboration?
- Meeting regularly to have continuous interaction
at different levels Professors and researchers
with middle level managers, top management
meeting with university rectors or deans and
public funding organizations, in order to develop
the network across the triple helix - Top Management of the company can be involved in
the advisory bodies of academic institutions and
provide sponsoring of company-relevant research - Docents from universities can be invited to make
sabbaticals in companies to become familiar with
real-life business problems
159) What functions are expected from a university
to act in a professional way towards companies?
- Access to government/EU funded research consortia
- Professional patent function offering clearly
defined IPR related process - Network function offering access to other
faculties and universities
1610) What strategies, models and tools do you (the
company in question) use to establish mutually
rewarding collaborations with universities?
- Specifying clear and measurable targets at the
beginning, with milestones and active follow-up - Clear influence on people selection to get the
winning scientists - Co-location of the collaboration project to
secure that a shared practice is developed - Treating students and researchers as employees
who are fully integrated in the team - Socializing arrangements for the right trusted
networks to be established
17Four Emerging Models for I-U Collaboration
18The Outsourced Model of Combibloc was established
to enhance access without increasing complexity
of collaboration
- The outsourced model was established in order to
- Increase access to academic brainpower without
increasing complexity - Leverage a wider and deeper network of academics
to solve concrete customer problems - The outsourced model was established by
- Encouraging a Professor who knew Combibloc and
their business problems very well to establish a
research company - Giving him enough funds to recruit 3 graduating
Doctoral students, who all had done their theses
in collaboration with Combibloc - The key elements of the outsourced model are
- Specific research problems are given/outsourced
to the Invention Center (IC), which is working on
an exclusive basis for Combibloc - IC identifies the right skills within their vast
networks spanning several universities in Eastern
Europe - The main benefits of the outsourced model are
- Enhanced reach into wider and deeper networks
- Clear interface and ease of collaboration
- Drawbacks and challenges of the outsourced model
- Obligation to feed the IC, or else it may turn to
competitors
19CB is skilled at leveraging science for
innovation designing an anvil for ultrasonic
sealing
- One success-example was with the IC at Dresden
University for the development and design of an
anvil for ultrasonic sealing - The task was to calculate the actual behavior of
the anvil and find out why certain problems occur
using previous models of anvils - IC leveraged the required brainpower within
Dresden University to analyze the anvils
behavior through a special computer simulation
based on the science of self-frequency - By better understanding and estimating ultrasonic
vibration problems it was possible to use a
smaller screw can that took more pressure than
the previous much larger screw - The results could be commercialized and applied
to several commercial packaging machine platforms
moving from science to sales in six months
20Combibloc collects know how from universities,
but outsources collaboration to a spin-off
company instead of sending away their own
researchers
21The Spin-Off Model of Bang Olufsen was
established to drive university education towards
the new breakthrough technology standard
- The spin off model was established in order to
- Increase access to academic brainpower without
bringing them into the main company - Drive the training of engineering students
towards their new ICE standard - The spin off model was established by
- Establishing a new company close to leading
universities in Copenhagen and Lund - The key elements of the spin off model are
- To bring in the same amount of university
students as internal employees to do master
projects - To carefully select the master candidates through
training courses, special projects and bachelor
theses - The main benefits of the spin off model are
- Wider attack on innovation through free access to
students - Drawbacks and challenges of the spin off model
- No possibility to work with PhDs in Denmark since
the new I-U legislation was enforced
22A comprehensive training/university education
program is given at two selected universities to
steer knowledge-creation towards the ICEpower
standard
23Success case From development to
commercialization in 9 months
- A new technology platform for an amplifier of a
mobile phone was developed by a master student in
six months - After another six months the technology was
licensed to this commercial partner. Except for
the master student the CTO of BO ICEpower was
also involved in this project. - The student was doing a six month thesis project
without a salary and was hired for three months
after getting his degree spending most of this
time in Korea - The first prepaid royalty for the technology
licensing exceeded the total project cost by more
than three times - The first two years of royalties will give
another tenfold return on the total project cost
24One success leading to another
- A very advanced bachelor thesis project was
defined to develop the first 3D digital sound
processor (amplifier) chip for a mobile phone.
The student started to work on new algorithms
that were integrated into a PCM-PWM (Pulse Code
Modulated Pulse Width Modular) chip - The whole amplifier chip measured 5x5 millimeters
and the actual DSP required less than 10 per cent
of that space. This second amplifier chip now
provides louder and better quality big stereo
sound with a 3D effect giving the impression
that the small loudspeakers on the mobile handset
move five meters apart - The exclusive customer of this amplifier produces
more than 100 million mobile phones per year. In
2006, one fourth of all phones will have the new
technology, which gradually also will be applied
also to lower-end phones - The initial licensing fees amount to
approximately 100 times the project cost.
25Unsuccessful cooperation due to the change in
IPRs laws
- A PhD project was initiated and co-funded by BO
ICEpower prior to the project start. The IPR laws
changed one year after the project start - Hence, when the student came up with a good idea
he was forced to hand it over to the Patent
Office of the University - The University tried to sell the patent to a very
large American company, and required as much as
15 of the total turnover of the company as a
whole not just on revenues generated by the new
patent
26The Spin-Off Model of BO is based on continuous
knowledge creation by bringing students into
their own lab and to the manufacturing plants of
their customers
27The Insourced Model of Porsche gives a unique
competitive advantage in terms of cost-efficient
innovation leadership
- The insourced model was established in order to
- Bring in low-cost academic brainpower to solve
tasks too focused for internal employees - Enhance creativity and compensate for lacking
internal resources in research - The insourced model was established by
- Turning master student internships into a
web-supported and fully institutionalized core
process - The key elements of the insourced model are
- To bring in 600 master students per year into an
organization of 2000 internal employees - To carefully select and recruit the top 5 and
use a significant portion of the ones who leave
for strategic intelligence - The main benefits of the insourced model are
- Deeper exploration of innovation through low cost
access to highly motivated students - Drawbacks and challenges of the insourced model
- Students can join competitors
- Limited possibility to work with PhDs on
strategic topics in Germany due to enforced
openness
28Porsche defines very specific and usually highly
challenging tasks for the students
- Exploring and analyzing new laser welding
technologies - Testing new forms of surface treatment in
collaboration with new pre-selected key suppliers - Building and structuring new internal knowledge
databases for optimal access to and sharing of
technological knowledge - Scanning and assessing new research sources for
and suppliers of high performance parts in ultra
light materials - Adopting the transmission software to allow for a
specific car model to be driven the American
way in the US market, i.e., giving it smoother
and less aggressive temper so that coffee and
drinks are not spilled out
29Porsche integrates a large portion of university
students to mix their research straight into
their melting pot of production-oriented know how
30The On-Campus Model of SCA Why the model was
established?
- SCA wanted to use proximity to establish closer
collaboration with the Mid-Sweden University and
get a more entrepreneurial atmosphere than in
their traditional RD centers - SCA also wanted to proactively support the
build-up of a research program at the Mid-Sweden
University by co-funding the program and
co-locating some of their own RD people - The main idea underlying this decision was to get
a quicker and better payback on external research
investments and break the tradition of
zero-impact consortia - The Leadership of Mid-Sweden University wanted to
build a new area of research in closer
collaboration with the industry to acquire enough
research capability and resources so as to get
full university status
31The On-Campus Model of SCA How the model was
established?
- It was mainly driven by the former SCA director
of RD Alf DeRuvo and supported by the Vice
President (the Dean) at Mid-Sweden University
Kari Marklund and the Mayor of the County
(Landshövdingen in Västernorrland) at that time,
Börje Hörnlund - In 1999, at the same time as SCA was doing the
reorganization of their RD center, the Swedish
government decided to put 300mio SEK into a
Forest Industry Program part of which was
allocated to MSU and thus contributed to the
build-up of critical mass - When SCA transferred two research managers
Prof. Hans Höglund and Prof. Lars Wågberg into
the research program, the way of working became
professionalized and more project driven at the
University
32The On-Campus Model of SCA Key Elements of the
Model
- Open atmosphere delivering creative and
implementable research - Universitys leadership is supporting industy
collaboration - MSU can carry out full scale experiments in SCA
mills as they have very good relations with the
management at the mills in Sundsvall and beyond
33The On-Campus Model of SCA Main benefits and
drawbacks
- Benefits
- We gain speed by focusing on product developments
while getting qualified scientific input that we
would not have the time or qualification to
generate ourselves (interview, Folke Österberg,
Research Programme Director, SCA Packaging RD,
19.11.05) - One of the university researchers core strengths
is that even though they are pursuing fundamental
research, they are very good at implementing the
results. This is partly enabled by their full
access to the different SCA paper mills
(interview, Prof. Myat Htun, 23.11.05) - Through this closeness to Mid-Sweden University
we got contacts in other areas of their research
that turned to be useful. The on-campus setup
also created a more entrepreneurial atmosphere as
a side effect that has already resulted in
several spin-off companies (interview, Ulf
Carlson, Vice President, SCA Corporate Research
and Development, 19.11.05) - Drawbacks
- If the industrial research center is too far away
from the business and the company, it becomes too
university like - Mid-Sweden University can be perceived as a part
of SCA by other companies
34The On-Campus Model of SCA Examples of the
results accomplished through the model
- Several science-to-sales examples can be
identified - The wood materials group of Mid-Sweden University
had a PhD student, who made significant
contributions to the energy optimization of a new
newspaper mill owned by SCA, where the PhD is
now employed - SCA and Mid-Sweden University had a joint project
on the optimization of the forest road-net that
is now having positive impact on environment and
business - One SCA sponsored PhD student developed a unique
process control system for pulp production that
has now been implemented in all SCA paper mills - This on-campus setup has lead to a couple of
spin-off companies in areas of paper electronics,
developing breakthroughs like intelligent paper
and electronic diapers
35The On-Campus Model of SCA is bridging
application oriented and science based knowledge
for collective breakthrough innovation
36Advantages
Disadvantages
Model
- Outsourced
- Spin-Off
- Insourced
- On-Campus
- Saving time in RD while keeping risk capital
under a certain control - Securing a clear interface with a vast network of
universities - Proactively driving the education of new
engineers and explore bold ideas at low cost - Reaching a new customer-base by deploying a core
technology new application areas - Access to cheap, fast and flexible brainpower to
perform impossible tasks and recruit the best
engineers - Alumni replacing the R in the RD activities
and providing continuous technology intelligence - Mutually enriching exchange and
cross-fertilization between academic and
corporate researchers including research
infrastructure - Faster and more systematic science-to-sales
yielding new spin-offs with significant business
impact
- Need to feed the external unit with regular
business, or else this unit may have to turn
towards new customers - Potential loss of control of the evolution of the
core technology - Geographical distance between main-company and
the spin-off - Risk of leakage of strategic information when the
students leave - Constant introduction and training of new
students - Company dominance of a public university
- Risk of overdependence on one university and loss
of touch with the rest of the business