Title: Academic Entrepreneurship
1Academic Entrepreneurship
2Academic Entrepreneurship
- People with Academic degrees who found companies
- University spin-offs
- Phenomenon rare but survival of those that do
start is high (68) - Creating spin-offs is more profitable than
Licensing to Established firms - It all got started in the 1970s..about
3Silicon Valley and Route 128
- West and East coast
- Stanford MIT Sloan
- Technology Meccas
- Semiconductors, IT and Biotech
- Setback in the late 70s early 80s Silicon
Valley recovered, but MIT only lately - Role-models to therest of the world
4Innovation Systems
- A genuine belief that it was indeed possible to
engineer a deficiency in entrepreneurship - A clear favoring of opportunistic
entrepreneurship over necessity entrepreneurship. - Necessity entrepreneurship does not really
exist - Political and Social Issue
- Social Entrepreneurship
5Innovation Systems
6Finland
- Population 5.2 million
- 69 urban
- 338.000 km2
- 10 water, 68 forest
- GDP, USD 128 billion
7Turku Region290,000 inhabitants 130,000 jobs
14,000 firms
8University of Finland
- 20 Universities
- 29 Polytechnic colleges
- 120,000 starting places
- Personnel 12,000
- 38 of the population has an academic degree
9Finnish Science Parks
- 22 technology and
- science parks
- 550 employees
- 100 M turnover
- 1 600 enterprises
- 32 000 experts
- 1 000 000 m2
10Mission of Science Parks
- ENHANCE INDUSTRIAL PROFILE
- BUILD THE IMAGE OF THE REGIONAL ECONOMY
- IMPORTANT ROLE IN INNOVATION AND INDUSTRIAL
RENEVAL - SUPPORT THE FORMATION OF BUSINESSES
- NURTURE ENTREPRENEURSHIP
- INTERMEDIATES BETWEEN ACADEMIA AND INDUSTRY
- CATALYST FOR THE COMMERCIALISATION OF RESEARCH
RESULTS - TRANSFORMER OF IDEAS INTO NEW PRODUCTS AND
PROCESSES
11Technology Profiles
- Information and communications
- Healthcare and medical
- Environmental
- Electronics , optoelectronics
- Bio, pharmaceuticals
- Digital media, content production
- Food
- Materials
- Energy
- Logistics
- Measurement
- Metal, machine and tool
- Automation, lifting and moving
- Chemical and plastic
- Laser, optics
- Forestry and wood
- Paper manufacturing
- Nano
12The Finnish Innovation System
- 1982 First Finnish science park
- 1985 Premises for enterprises
- near universities, incubators
- 1988gt Finnish Science Park
- Association TEKEL
- 1990 Commercialising research-based
- business ideas
- 1994 gt Centre of Expertise Programme
- 1995 gt Developing regional clusters,
- specialized services
- 2000 gt Internationalisation
- 1979 Founding of National technology committee
- 1982 Council of State resolution on
technologypolicy - 1983 Founding of Tekes
- 1984 Commencement of Technology programmes
- 1991 Finland becomes a member of CERN
- 1992 Founding of Finnish Secretariat for EU RD
13Tekes mission statement
- Tekes primary objective is to promote the
competitiveness of Finnish industry and the
service sector by technological means. - Activities aim to diversify production
structures, increase production and exports, and
create a foundation for employment and societal
wellbeing.
14Turku Science Park
- three universities
- four polytechnics
- university hospital
- 13 500 employees
- 25 000 students
- 400 professors
- 300 companies and organizations
- over 210 000 m2 of premises
15The Incubator
- Their story
- nearly 150 startups
- 1989-2005
- success rate 85-90
- nearly 800 new jobs
- at the moment about 30 ventures in the
- incubators
- My questions
- 16 yrs
- 9 firms/yr
- 50 new jobs/yrs
- Only 0.5 want to start growth companies gt
minimum 200 firms to get 1 growth company - Is this the economic engine?
16Assuming Innovation Entrepreneurship
- Is it a recipe for opting out?
- Most entrepreneurs are replicators
- Innovative entrepreneurship (high expectation
entrepreneurship Autio, 2005) has a high 1.6
prevalence and a low 0.5 prevalence - What about the other 98.4 - 99.5?
- This fraction stands for most new jobs created
and economic wealth creation - Technology entrepreneurship
- Entrepreneruship innovation (Schumpeter)
17National/Regional Innovation Systems (NIS/RIS)
- Policy makers attempts to increase
- Economic growth
- Entrepreneurship
- Employment, and
- Taxable income
- Innovative firms a.k.a high technology companies
- Assumed to create high salary employment
- Modern version of smoke-stack industry
- Most firm start small and never grow 3 manage
to grow beyond 100 persons - Large body of previous research - growing
18The ideal Triple Helix
Govern-ment
Govern- ment
Univer-sity
Univer-sity
Indus-try
Indus-try
b. A laissez-faire model
University
a. An etatistic model
Govern- ment
Industry
c.Triple Helix
19The study
- The aim
- Seek a common understanding of what an innovation
system is and what it should be - Identify potential weaknesses
- Identify potential overlap between the
organizations, and - Identify what measures need to be taken in order
to increase venture development and emergence of
growth companies
- 50 in-depth interviews 1.5 hours taped and
transcribed - Representatives of govt agencies (science park,
regional development centres, area development
centres, national technology agency - Universities and polytechnic colleges
(researchers, rectors, deans, administrative
support personnel) - Entrepreneurs operating within the science park
20The study
- Survey among research and teaching personnel in
three universities and one polytechnic college
response rate 23,5 N326
- Here we report on
- 10 interviews from one out of the three
universities researchers and administrative
personnel - 8 entrepreneurs
21Results
- What is an innovation system?
- Is there any other system than the US model a
capital and knowledge intensive environment that
generates knowledge intensive growth companies - I dont know!
- What do you do if you have an idea?
- You go behind the corner and wait til it blows
over, and then you back to research! - We have tried to stay away as much as possible
from their meetings and we want it to be that way
22Innovation system as seen by entrepreneurs and
researchers
a. An etatistic model
b. A laissez-faire model
! The entrepreneur
! Sources of Innovation
23Parallel universes the entrepreneurs view
24Conclusions
- The researcher is passionate about research
- Involvement in entrepreneurship is time away from
important research - Does not know who the relevant government bodies
are - Does not see itself as part of the science park
- The link (important) to business is through
Industry collaboration contract research
business innovation system - Government A real bureaucratic monster!
- The entrepreneur is part of an innovative
business system not a government run national
innovation system - Does not think a science park can provide any
relevant support - A hotel with broadband
- Needs university collaboration to perform basic
research - Problematic
- Different worlds
25Conclusions
- We are quite far from the ideal Triple Helix
- The entrepreneur is excluded
- The innovators is excluded
- A RIS or a NIS appears to assume that ideas and
potential entrepreneurs will line up if the
system is in place!
26What do we know about university/business
collaboration
- Sometimes it leads to spun out business
- But those conducting research in close proximity
to business become better scientists and if they
start businesses become more likley to succeed - What do you know about the Bayh-Dole Act 1980?
27Made it significantly much easier to
commercialize or license federally funded
innovations