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Myths and Realities in University-Industry Partnerships

Myths and Realities in University-Industry Partnerships. Peter Munsche Assistant Vice-President, Technology Transfer University of Toronto PAGSE Symposium 2000 October 24, 2000 Ottawa, Ontario. Our favourite myth. “We’re not very good at technology transfer, are we?”. Some facts.

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Myths and Realities in University-Industry Partnerships

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  1. Myths and Realities inUniversity-Industry Partnerships Peter Munsche Assistant Vice-President, Technology Transfer University of Toronto PAGSE Symposium 2000 October 24, 2000 Ottawa, Ontario

  2. Our favourite myth • “We’re not very good at technology transfer, are we?”

  3. Some facts • between 1991-97 U.S.Canada Licensing revenues +271% +242% Industrial funding +103% +348% Source: AUTM Licensing Survey

  4. International comparison • share of university R&D funded by industry 1991 1997 Canada 6.3% 11.8% Germany 7.8% 7.5% U.K. 7.6% 6.2% U.S.A. 4.7% 5.5% Source: Statistics Canada

  5. We’re good at something? Why? • government policies • tax credits • matching grants • changing industry attitudes • need for value added • knowledge-based industries • Canadian universities, eh?

  6. What do Canadian universities do? • have lots of research expertise • know how to use matching grant programs • are flexible about IP rights • psst! no Bayh-Dole Act • build relationships

  7. Example: Bell University Labs • initiated 1998 • total company investment: $35 million over 3 years • multi-university participation • NCM2 in Quebec • Waterloo • Toronto

  8. BUL at Toronto • collaborative investment • $13.5 million from Bell • $11.8 million from Ontario R&D Challenge Fund • $3 million from University (plus in-kind) • spent on • 4 endowed Chairs (plus 4 junior positions) • $4.3 million in research funding • lab enhancements, start-up funding, technical staff

  9. That’s big, but why is it special? - I • it’s a strategic investment • has the commitment of senior management at both University and Bell • focus is not technical • research involves sociology, law, medicine, education, psychology, as well as computer science and engineering

  10. That’s big, but why it is special? - II • management is collaborative • research investments decided by a Joint Committee • both University and Bell have assigned staff to make it work • emphasis on communication • company “champions” required for projects • BUL Seminar Series • short courses for Bell employees

  11. Any conclusions? • technology transfer is more than royalties and spin-off companies • Canada is better at this than it thinks • we need to move beyond projects to long-term programatic relationships • it can be done

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