ITIF Report: Helping Tech Start-Ups Scale - Industry Today - Leader in Manufacturing & Industry News

Industry’s Media Platform of Choice
Champion Your Brand in Front of Decision Makers and Extend Your Reach Get Featured in the SPOTLIGHT

 

March 31, 2017 ITIF Report: Helping Tech Start-Ups Scale

WASHINGTON—Venture capital firms have reined in their funding for resource-intensive start-ups trying to commercialize new technologies in fields such as clean energy, advanced manufacturing, and robotics—but universities, industry, and government can bridge that gap by partnering to offer key resources, not just funding, argues the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF) in a new report out today. The tech-policy think tank advocates a new model of so-called “innovation orchards,” which could provide “hard-technology” start-ups with the know-how, access to technology, equipment, and bridge funding they need to scale up new technologies until they are ready for venture funds.

“Too many valuable innovations are falling through the cracks in their early stages because they are more time-, cost-, and risk-intensive than many investors are willing to take on,” said Robert D. Atkinson, ITIF’s president. “By leveraging resources that regions already have in place, ‘innovation orchards’ create more bang for the buck when it comes to commercialization. It’s a model that can move new technologies to the stage where venture capital or company partners are ready to play a role.”

The new report—authored by Peter Singer, a policy advisor at the MIT Washington Office, and William B. Bonvillian, a lecturer at MIT and a member of ITIF’s board—suggests that while there is still a promising venture capital path for software and biotech innovation, VC firms have slowed investment in resource-intensive “hard technologies” like clean energy or advanced materials. In 2015, software accounted for 40 percent of total venture investment; biotechnology captured 13 percent; and various services categories (including media and entertainment) totaled 31 percent. In comparison, the industrial/energy sector accounted for only 5 percent.

To fill this gap, Singer and Bonvillian point to several promising new collaborations that leverage strengths in a region’s innovation system to help start-ups develop advanced prototypes, then demonstrate, test, and bring them to the manufacturing stage:

  • Cyclotron Road, which is supported by the Department of Energy and its Lawrence Berkeley Lab, offers newly formed energy companies advanced equipment, technology, and know-how to take on the development stages of advanced prototyping, demonstration, testing, and production design.
  • TechBridge, a program at the Boston branch of the Fraunhofer Institute organization—a nonprofit applied-research and development laboratory—links start-ups with established firm partners for collaboration on late-stage development, with extensive lab support for new technology and product validation. It helps to certify new technologies through industry-driven validation and demonstration projects that Fraunhofer performs, rather than through the innovators themselves, as in the case of Cyclotron Road.
  • MIT’s The Engine is another entrant that builds on the university’s interest in bringing together technology start-ups, large companies, biopharma companies, federal labs, local incubators, and small- and medium-sized manufacturers in the region. It aims to fill the gap by offering space, technology, and know-how as a substitute for initial financing, then de-risking and accelerating new technologies, so they can come into range of existing financing.
  • Finally, an experiment between the Massachusetts Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP), a public–private partnership dedicated to serving small and medium-sized manufacturers, and Greentown Labs, an area incubator, adds another element: creating collaborations between small area manufacturers and start-ups for production prototypes and pilot production.

To further spur new approaches like these, Singer and Bonvillian urge policymakers to seed innovation orchards in more federal labs, leverage the technology and know-how of universities, and link small manufacturers to start-ups through Manufacturing Extension Partnerships, which are jointly supported by the National Institute of Standards and Technology and every state.

“Too many science-based innovations will die on the vine because venture capital firms can’t manage the risk, and this has major implications for future job creation,” said Atkinson. “Government labs, universities, and the MEP program can help fill this gap. The costs would be modest, because these existing assets could be readily repurposed, and the early experiments we are seeing show the results could be powerful.

Read summary.

Read report.

The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF) is an independent, nonpartisan research and educational institute focusing on the intersection of technological innovation and public policy. Recognized as one of the world’s leading science and technology think tanks, ITIF’s mission is to formulate and promote policy solutions that accelerate innovation and boost productivity to spur growth, opportunity, and progress. Learn more at itif.org.

Contact:
Kaya Singleton
+1.202.524.4387
ksingleton@itif.org

 

Subscribe to Industry Today

Read Our Current Issue

Made To Stay: Attracting Gen Z Into Manufacturing

Most Recent EpisodeAn Ambition To Be a Great Leader

Listen Now

A childhood in Kansas, college in California where she met her early mentor, Leigh Lytle spent 15 years in the Federal Reserve Banking System and is now the 1st woman President & CEO of the Equipment Leasing & Finance Association. Join us to hear about her ambition to be a great leader.