With over $1 billion in research invested annually at Michigan universities, technology transfer to entrepreneurs and established companies can play a major role in transforming Michigan's economy. Join representatives of the Association of University Technology Managers, the University of Michigan Venture Center, MSU Technologies, and Wayne State Technology Commercialization to learn how you can leverage tech transfer and sponsored research in your energy venture.
October 2010 - Michigan Energy Forum - Robin Rasor
1. Managing our Cultures: Successfully
Licensing Technologies
Robin L. Rasor
President Elect
Association of University Technology Managers
Director of Licensing
University of Michigan
2. Outline
• What is AUTM?
• What are companies looking for?
• How do we do a deal?
• Who are our stakeholders?
• Where does U Michigan fit in?
• Licensing Components
3. Association of University Technology Managers
• AUTM is a community of over 3500
technology transfer professionals working in
academic, research, government, legal and
commercial settings
• Dedicated to transferring research from
academic/research institutions for the benefit
of the public through commercial avenues
5. Role of the Inventor
The Inventor
• They are all different; they may want:
Additional research funding
$$
Consulting
Glory
Benefit the public
• Some are hands-off; some are engaged
• Some are entrepreneurial
Form their own companies
Take leave of absences
• All get a share in the revenues
6. The Department
The Dept/College
• Royalties can mean unrestricted revenue for
research/education:
No overhead
“Found money”
Hard to plan for
• How to incentivize the inventors
7. The College and University
The University
• Royalty Income Can:
Pay for the Tech Transfer Office
Translational Funds
Other Research
• “Big Hits” can pay for buildings, endowed chairs,
centers, etc.
8. The Nation
The State and Nation
JOBS
(hopefully high paying)
+
Products for the benefit of the Public
9. The World
The World
Global Health
Global Warming
Reduced Reliance on Oil
10. Stakeholder Conflicts
Stakeholder Conflicts
• Dollars vs. Deals
• Royalties vs. Research Funds
• Startups vs. Established Licenses
• Licensees in Your State vs. Other States
• Access in Developing Countries
11. How Does UM rank Nationally?
Research Exp. Invention Patent Issued New Startups Annual Revenue Licensing Total
($MM) Reports Applications Patents Agreements ($MM) FTEs FTEs
U-M ’09** 1,016.6 MIT 522 JHU 500 (?) MIT 122 U Wash 205 MIT 20 MIT 89.1 U Wisc 19 U Wisc 69
U-M ’08** 929.0 Stanford 400 U IL 367 Stanford 121 Stanford 107 UCB 14 U MN 83.3 MIT 18 Stanford 43
UCSF 885.0 U-M ’09 350 Penn 341 U Wisc 85 MIT 98 UCSD 14 Stanford 62.5 U Wash 16 UMN 42
U Wisc 882.0 U IL 363 MIT 282 U-M ‘08 75 JHU 92 U-M ‘08 13 UCSF 62.4 U MN 14 U Wash 41
UCLA 871.0 U Wisc 350 U Wisc 270 U-M ’09 72 U-M ‘08 91 Duke 12 U Wash 47.0 JHU+APL 13 U IL 36
UCSD 842.0 U Wash 349 U Wash 226 U Wash 56 U-M ’09 78 JHU+APL 12 UCLA 32.8 Cornell 12 UCLA 32
JHU 836.0 Penn 332 Cornell 222 Cornell 54 U Wisc 68 Stanford 12 U-M ‘08 25.0 Penn 12 MIT 31
Duke 767.0 UCSD 330 UCLA 221 U IL 54 Cornell 65 U CO 11 UCSD 22.7 UCD 12 Cornell 30
U Wash 765.0 UCLA 314 U CO 188 UCSD 45 U MN 64 U IL 11 U-M ’09 18.3 UCSF 11 Penn 29
Penn 708.0 U-M ‘08 306 UCSD 180 Penn 44 U IL 61 U Wash 9 JHU 11.2 OSU 10 UCSD 29
OSU 703.0 JHU 305 U-M ’09 151 UCLA 42 Pitt 58 U-M ’09 8 U IL 10.3 Stanford 10 U-M ’09 27
Penn State 701.0 Pitt 244 U-M ‘08 132 JHU 40 U CO 58 Cornell 5 UCD 8.0 UCLA 10 U-M ‘08 27
Stanford 688.0 Cornell 242 UCB 102 Duke 38 Penn 49 Penn 5 Cornell 6.8 U IL 9 JHU+APL 24
U MN 683.0 U CO 237 Pitt 100 U MN 37 UCSF 49 Pitt 3 Pitt 6.7 UCSD 9 Duke 21
MIT 660.0 U MN 217 UCD 93 Pitt 36 UCSD 43 U MN 1 Penn 6.6 U-M ’09 8 UCD 20
Cornell 654.0 UCSF 200 UCSF 76 UCB 36 UCLA 38 OSU n/a U CO 6.1 U-M ‘08 8 UCSF 18
UCD 643.0 UCD 181 U MN 58 UCSF 35 UCD 24 Penn State n/a UCB 5.2 Duke 7 Pitt 18
Pitt 596.0 UCB 155 Duke n/a Penn State 28 UCB 23 U Wisc n/a Duke n/a Pitt 7 OSU 17
UCB 592.0 Duke n/a OSU n/a U CO 28 Duke n/a UCD n/a OSU n/a UCB 7 U CO 16
U IL n/a OSU n/a Penn State n/a UCD 21 OSU n/a UCLA n/a Penn State n/a U CO 5 Penn State 11
U CO n/a Penn State n/a Stanford n/a OSU 15 Penn State n/a UCSF n/a U Wisc n/a Penn State 4 UCB 10
* Source: Tech transfer offices, USPTO, NSF. Data subject to potential revision
** Original U-M expenditures updated to include Faculty Group Practice research
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15. Licensing Components: Summary
• Living document
• Total value of the deal
• Continued progress toward commercial
development of the product is important
• Don’t get “hung up” on one term
• Eventually the royalty component is a small
part of the cost of the product
• Global health provisions
• Creative terms/Flexibility
• Establishing a relationship