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| Access to the communication capabilities of the AIME facility,
including high speed Internet, wireless capabilities and videoconferencing
are among the benefits start-up companies have in partnering
with UA's Bama Technology Incubator. (Rickey Yanaura) |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Match one part University of Alabama
faculty discovery with one part investor displaying an entrepreneurial
spirit. Mix in a sound business plan, expert legal advice and top-notch
communication facilities, alongside assistance with plan implementation.
Ensure all these ingredients blend within a favorable environment.
The results from such a recipe? A successful startup company employing
area residents and drawing from University of Alabama expertise.
That’s part of the planned formula behind the launching
of UA’s Bama Technology Incubator. Housed within UA’s
Alabama Institute for Manufacturing Excellence, the Bama Technology
Incubator began operation about one year ago.
“We try to provide a lot of services that would be cost
prohibitive to a startup company,” said Dr. Daniel Daly,
director of both technology transfer at UA and the University’s
Alabama Institute for Manufacturing Excellence. “Just as
the name incubator implies, it’s a protective shield that
enables the company to start out with some insulation.”
Dr. Keith McDowell, vice-president of research at UA, said he
envisions a time when obtaining patents on faculty discoveries
and partnering with venture capitalists to launch startup companies
becomes more routine for campus researchers.
“We want The University of Alabama to learn how to do this
as a regular course of business,” McDowell said.
Research was once conducted as part of the “light-bulb generation” mindset,
and patentable discoveries focused on complete inventions developed
by researchers, said McDowell. That’s no longer the case. “This
is the knowledge generation,” McDowell said. “The creation
of new knowledge is an intellectual property.”
One example of an agreement between UA and a private company,
centering around new knowledge developed at the University, can
be found at Cr3 Inc.
Discoveries led by Dr. John Vincent, professor of chemistry at
UA, led to multiple patents related to chromium’s potential
use in treatment of diabetes and other diseases. The patents have
been licensed to the Birmingham-based company, led by CEO Michael
Alder. The company is pursuing use of the technology in a vitamin
supplement.
The Incubator is designed to promote economic growth by boosting
the number of tech companies in Alabama, administering programs
to assist those companies, and facilitating access to technologies
developed in UA’s laboratories, according to the Incubator’s
developers.
Faculty members and researchers with patentable and marketable
techniques and inventions are eligible to work with the Incubator,
regardless of their areas of expertise, Daly said. “It doesn’t
have to be tied to a technology that would typically be housed
in the AIME,” Daly said.
Leaders of the Incubator include Daly, Dr. Marianne Woods, associate
vice president for research at UA, and Michael Spearing, attorney
in UA’s Office of Counsel.
Ideas considered for inclusion within the Incubator are first
reviewed by a panel to gauge the marketability of the discovery,
Daly said. If the discovery is deemed to have potential to lead
to a reasonable chance of business success and if the researcher
then agrees to join, the Incubator’s representatives will
attempt to sell the intellectual property to a potential investor.
Fifty percent of revenue streams generated by the company are returned
to the researchers whose discoveries led to the launching of the
company.
UA researchers who agree to partner with the Incubator serve as
scientific advisers to the company, but they do not serve as the
company’s business managers, Daly said. “We do not
want these highly productive faculty members to become business
managers; we want them to remain productive faculty members.”
In addition to the intellectual property and access to the brain
power behind it, companies can benefit from the partnership through
the business model UA can develop for them, the potential of leasing
lab space to launch a pilot production facility, and the state
of the art communication capabilities of the AIME facility, including
high speed Internet and wireless capabilities and videoconferencing.
Having the option of hiring UA’s students, including those
who may have worked closely with the researcher whose idea is being
marketed, is another huge selling point, Daly said, as is the opportunity
for the additional entrepreneurial training UA can offer a startup.
After three years in startup mode, the company, ideally would
leave the protection of UA and become self-supporting at an off-campus
location but one that is, ideally, not too far away, Daly said.
“We will strongly encourage the economic opportunities of
this area,” Daly said.
Ventures such as those the Incubator seeks can be beneficial to
UA as it can allow the University to recoup some of the costs it
invests in seeking patents and business partners. Perhaps more
importantly, Daly said, a successful Incubator program enhances
the school’s stature in the eyes of productive faculty and
potential faculty.
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