| Midwest
Nanotech – Hype or Reality?
by Tim Smith, PhD, 2 April 2003
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Scientists in the Midwest US have made significant
contributions to nanotechnology, but do these advances present real
business opportunities in the region? At the Biomedical Opportunities
in Nanotechnology panel discussion during CUBIC 2003 on March 7th,
experts from business, investors, support agencies, and universities
clarified the reality and challenges of creating an economically
vital nanotech community within the Midwest.
The panel leader, John Abrams from Launch Capacity,
explored the paradigm that successful new venture creation depends
upon the combination of ideas, capital, and markets. All of these
are required, yet this paradigm seemed to miss a key ingredient.
Ideas
On the question of the importance of ideas, scientific advances
were clearly insufficient for successful business creation. Sean
Murdock of Atom Works mentioned the advances developed in laboratories
at Northwestern, UIC, and Argonne National Laboratories. Yet, Tomas
Cox from Seneca Partners replied that local academic support makes
little difference in new venture creation. Intellectual capital
has shown a high willingness to travel to centers of economic activity.
But are the ideas worthy? To this the panel unanimously
agreed. To Alan D. Feinerman, PhD, from the University of Illinois
at Chicago nanotechnology is exciting science and demonstrates real
promise to change the world. Mr. Murdock added that real changes
in consumer products are being derived from advances in nanotechnology
materials. These include longer lasting tennis balls from Wilson
and better coatings for GM automotive. Currently, biomedical nanotechnology
is commercializing tools, sensors, and diagnostics. As the field
develops with FDA approved therapeutic regimens, nanotechnology
will change the way health care is provided.
Mr. Murdock also reminded the audience that the development
of these ideas into broad commercial use will take time. Technological
advances enter the market in a non-linear fashion, with a slow early
market penetration followed by exponential growth prior to entering
maturity.
Capital
With respect to capital, Prof. Feinerman agreed that early capital
infusion is required to commercialize nanotechnology science. The
availability of funding from the SBIR aides in the funding process
according to Alan A. Harpern, MD, MBA, from Orthopedic Development
indicated. Mr. Halpern added that Michigan has deployed money gained
from its tobacco settlement to fund companies during the SBIR process.
In Illinois however, the tobacco settlement was squandered on tax
rebates. On the positive side, Ms. Nancy Sullivan from the Illinois
Coalition revealed that Illinois has worked to group firms together
and encourage them to share resources with the academic research
community.
The sharing of resources approach taken by Illinois
does make a significant difference in lowering the capital requirements
of nanotechnology ventures. The capital requirements for developing
a new venture in nanotechnology are significantly large. Prof. Feinerman
pointed out the requirement of a new venture to spend a half million
dollars on machinery and a half million on operations in the first
year of operations alone. The Illinois approach to sharing resources
however saves companies much of this expense and avoids the purchasing
of excess capacity.
Yet, funding may not be the major barrier to success.
To Mr. Cox, time is the enemy.
Markets
New ventures need a clear path to the creation of a viable business
and investors demand a clear exit path. In nanotechnology, this
path usually includes the ability to create a product that customers
must have. Nice to haves simply won’t suffice. Examples of
must haves products are those that lower costs, increase revenues,
or improve human well being. The creation of these products enables
a new venture to become a critical component of another business.
When Mr. Cox advises new businesses, he stresses the need to uncover
customers for whom the technology will “get in their way”
and become a must have.
Uncovering the early market is clearly the key to
success for new businesses. Mr. Halpern added that nanotechnology
business is about the market, not the technology. He went as far
as to iterate that if an organization can’t sell the product,
who cares if they can make it. Of these three ingredients to new
venture creation: ideas, capital, and markets; markets appear to
be the most important.
The Missing Key – Human
Capital
While these three ingredients may be necessary for fostering new
ventures, they do not indicate the where the new ventures would
develop. When Mr. Abrams focused the panel on the issue of success
in the Midwest, human capital issues became paramount.
Ms. Sullivan pointed to the ability of Midwest ventures
to marry MBAs from two of the top ten global business schools with
scientist from the most active nanotechnology academic community.
But freshly minted MBAs may not be the right executives for a new
nanotechnology venture.
The development of new business opportunities has
a greater dependence upon the willingness of experienced business
executives to take risks. Well trained, experienced, and developed
executives from larger corporations provide more fertile ground
for new venture development according to Mr. Cox.
Moreover, new venture executives must be fostered
in a risk taking environment. Mr. Murdock reminded us that 90% of
new businesses fail. As such, experienced venture executives have
often failed in their past two attempts. Dishearteningly, to Mr.
Cox and others on the panel, Chicago has a “one strike and
your out” mentality. I hope Mr. Cox’s viewpoint proves
to be wrong.
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Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Small and medium sized businesses
select Wiglaf for our quantitative and fact driven approach to intelligent
revenue growth. www.wiglaf.biz.
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