Bridging Labs and Markets with Errol Arkilic [Idea Machines #15]
In this episode I talk to Errol Arkilic about different systems involved in turning research into companies.
Errol has been helping research make the jump from the lab to the market for more than fifteen years: he was a program manager at the National Science Foundation or NSF, Small Business Innovation Research or SBIR program, where he awarded grants to hundreds of companies commercializing research. He started the NSF Innovation Corps, a program that gives researchers the tools they need to make the transition to running a successful business. Currently he is a partner at M34 capital where he focuses exclusively on projects that are being spun out of labs. Seeing the often rocky tech transition from so many sides has given him a nuanced view of the whole system.
Key TakeawaysLinks
M34 Capital
The SBIR Program
Business Model Canvases
Errol on How the NSF Works
Pasteur's Quadrant
NSF Innovation Corps
Topics
What is the pathway to commercialization
How do you have an iterative process when people don't know what they want
What do the best researchers do to pull out core problems to work on?
How do you address the tension of people wanting to apply their hammers?
What are examples of people who have applied very specific technologies?
How do you assemble a team around a technology?
How do you systemitize assembling teams?
How do you systemitize finding technologies that can plug a technological hole?
What do you think about patents?
Patents, trade screts,
Technology that isn't venture fundable
Valuable ideas that aren't valuable enough to pursue
Systemitizing finding whether value could be harvested
Where is the role of SBIRs in today's world
SBIR decision making process
Lengendary SBIR successes
Push vs. Pull out of lab
How do you find MIST projects
Are there labs in unintuitive programs
Next steps outside of local ecosystems?
Does any new innovation need a champion?
What should people be thinking about that they're not?
TISM vs MIST
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