Industry Partnerships at the University of Cincinnati: Their Role in Research, Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Commercialization

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Industry Partnerships at the University of Cincinnati: Their Role in Research, Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Commercialization William S. Ball, M.D. Interim Vice-President for Research University of Cincinnati

Research at UC by the numbers Putting Industry Research in perspective Industry Research Partnerships: Reinventing our future Why we should view industry partnerships as important? A cultural exchange: Integrating industry partnerships with our mission as a university Overcoming/addressing our own issues What makes for a good industry partner? The relationship of industry partnerships to innovation, entrepreneurship and commercialization at UC Creating the right interface for students, faculty and industry UC Accelerator for Commercialization, UCRI Synergy of student education with industry partnerships

Millions $500 $400 $300 $200 $100 $- 10-Year Research Funding UC and Affiliates 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 * Affiliates include: Children s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Shriners Hospitals for Children - Cincinnati, University of Cincinnati Physicians clinical trials. 2011 $418,282,277 2010 $443,034,127 2009 $377,865,075 2008 $353,029,246 2007 $333,502,261 2006 $332,655,266 2005 $332,298,402 2004 $319,624,151 2003 $310,483,057 2002 $260,890,739 The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) portion for the above figures is: FY2009 FY2010 FY2011 $2.2 million $65.5 million $47.9 million

10-Year Research Funding UC alone 2011 $251, 228,315 2010 $284,820,135 2009 $238,375,939 2008 $214,635,140 2007 $204,892,792 2006 $197,830,254 2005 $210,816,314 2004 $188,321,799 2003 $197,108,302 2002 $163,147,186

Research Growth UC and Affiliates In Fiscal Year 2010 and 2011 federal funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) accounted for a significant portion of the increase in research funding.

2011 Research Awards by Source FY 2011 Research Awards by Funding Source *Not including affiliates Based on a total of $251,228,315 Federal $208,507,901 83.00% NIH $100,949,904 40.18% NSF $9,884,423 3.93% DoD $16,797,087 6.69% D. of Edu. $52,003,506 20.70% Other Fed. $28,87,981 11.49% Industry 2011 $18,953,838 7.54% Local Government $390,457 0.15% State of Ohio $10,899,267 4.34% Other, Nonprofit $12,476,852 4.97% Industry 2010 $15,233,890 5.35% Federal funding remains our primary source for funding There is clearly room for growth in industry research; Target 20%

2011 Research Awards by Units * Other includes: Business, Clermont, General Education, Graduate School, Hoxworth Blood Center, and Student Affairs

Technology Transfer Activity 2012 2011 2010 Invention Disclosures 117 106 82 Royalty Income? $515,281 $480,602 Patent Applications 70 70 50 Patents Issued 20 11 16 Start-Up Activity 6 3 7 Within a major university, tech transfer may represent only a portion of the overall intellectual property

F & A Income to UC Fiscal Year Revenue 1999 $23,204,190.00 2000 $24,267,909.00 2001 $26,959,168.00 2002 $31,408,108.00 2003 $34,923,304.00 2004 $37,770,651.00 2005 $37,570,098.00 2006 $36,920,826.70 2007 $38,414,404.25 2008 $38,690,483.00 2009 $40,939,561.58 2010 $43,877,488.54 2011 $44,783,726.69

UC has a sufficient and rich repository of intellectual property as a major research university We are entering a phase of declining research dollars Our greatest source of funding is and likely will remain Federal dollars We have not leveraged industry funding in keeping with Industry dollars We have only a marginal record of bringing product to market by ourselves Industry Research Partnerships Why should they be important to UC?

Why should they be important to UC? UC Industry Enhanced research opportunities/funding for faculty and students Can be an important driver of innovation, entrepreneurship and commercialization at UC Enhancing job opportunities for students Support of community economic development Maintaining a competitive edge Increased outsourcing of research by industry, especially by small to medium sized companies where the greatest growth is to be expected in any economic recovery An increasing dependence on basic science Access to and input into workforce development

What makes for a good partnership? Mutual understanding of mission and culture Intellectual property rules clearly defined and negotiable Broad definition/recognition Internal Pipeline: renewable, adequate volume, reasonable flow Mutually agreeable policies Good communication UC Research Catalog Mutual community goals UC: Integrated faculty/disciplines Integrated university culture Adequate resources Reasonable speed of business Workforce development Opportunity for industry to be more involved

What makes for a good partnership? Mutual understanding of mission and culture Intellectual property rules clearly defined and negotiable Broad definition/recognition Internal Pipeline: renewable, adequate volume, reasonable flow Mutually agreeable policies Good communication UC Research Catalog Mutual community goals UC: Integrated faculty/disciplines Integrated university culture Adequate resources Reasonable speed of business Workforce development Opportunity for industry to be more involved

Challenges at UC Expanding opportunities to enhance partnerships UCRI Reassessing how we value industry partnerships Intellectual property: What it means, etc. Diversifying our Research Portfolio Federal and Industry Answering the question: What is the role for commercialization and entrepreneurship at UC? Building lasting industry relationships in an environment of shifting leadership. Regulatory/Compliance adjustments

7/20/2012

University of Cincinnati Rethinks Commercialization UC, like many universities, is now taking a new look at how commercialization fits within a university s charge, and the impact we can have within the community. Commercialization for a university is clearly not a get rich quick scheme, with emphasis on rich and quick. Universities must take advantage of commercializing the full range of its intellectual property rather than just a focus on technology transfer. If not to financially enhance the university, then why the effort on commercialization? It allows for innovation to grow and thrive within a university for faculty, students and staff. It provides for good stewardship in support of community growth and development Jobs for our students

University of Cincinnati Accelerator for Commercialization Dorothy H. Air, PhD Associate Vice President for Entrepreneurial Affairs and Technology Commercialization William S. Ball, MD Interim Vice President for Research

Technology Commercialization Accelerator Goals Short Term Goal: To establish a Technology Commercialization Accelerator on a pilot basis as a platform for attracting new financial resources and generating commercialization success Long Term Goal: To establish a permanent Technology Commercialization Accelerator as a vehicle for establishing UC as technology commercialization leader, generating new revenue streams through increased start-up company, licensing and industry activity and attracting additional external funding revenue streams Collaboration EB5, UC and State of Ohio Structured as a two year pilot project Focus initially on engineering and biosciences Initial funding - $750,000 with $500,000 pending from Third Frontier Location in Innovation development on Short Vine

UCRI 501c(3) Pilot funded by UC BOT $5M/5years Will be available to all colleges and affiliates Board of Directors 9 initial (4+5) with expansion to 11 CEO Search to begin in 2012 Transition Team currently in place to begin operations Industry sponsored research Allow for commercialization of all IP not just TT Centers Initial business and legal operations will be purchased services with eventual independent UCRI operations with continued growth Overhead to remain in UCRI or at discretion of Dean as long as it is used to advance research Allows for integration of education with research

UCRI Faculty Enhanced opportunity to partner with industry Compensation mechanism not in conflict with state/federal guidelines Enhanced funding of projects Students Enhanced career development UC Shift of risk Enhanced funding for research by faculty and students Diversifies portfolio Industry Enhanced access to the university Enhanced IP environment Enhanced speed of business Enhanced workforce opportunity Leadership which bridges culture

UCRI: GE-ARC Partnership with CEAS The GE-ARC, if located at the GE Aviation facility in Evendale, Ohio. The overall purpose of GE-ARC is to create a structure that will align laboratory innovation with commercial applications.by combining the combustion testing and feedback from the advanced emissions testing, we will be able to have continuous improvement in all aspects of design, manufacturing and evaluation thus creating transformative and creative concepts that will expand the current knowledge base. The technical focus of the Center will concentrate on three areas: Advanced Low-Emissions Combustion, Ceramic Matrix Composites and Aircraft Total Thermal Management. GE-ARC is now in partnership with CEAS-Aerospace as a UCRI project

One Stop Structure Professional Practice And Experiential Learning

Simulation Center Fibrous structure modeling Practical problems Project needs Knowledge base Experience Product and process development Technical capabilities Fundamental theory Fresh ideas Experiential learning Future recruitment pool Polymer structure modeling P&G Technical Team UC Simulation Center UC students and faculty Students and faculty works in the P&G computational environment and are an integral member of the P&G R&D team High research impact on product development

Medical Device Innovation & Entrepreneurship Program 4 Colleges participate 2-10 provisional patents filed annually 3 National Awards 2 start-up companies Supported by industry