This document summarizes a report on university gap funding programs. It finds that while universities help drive innovation through research and spin-offs, there is a lack of early-stage funding to commercialize discoveries. In response, universities have created 63 gap funding programs across 40 organizations. The report analyzes these programs and finds they have high commercialization rates, attract over $2.8 billion in additional investment, and create thousands of jobs. Gap funding helps advance technologies, build innovation networks, and maximize the impact of university research. It should be a priority given its ability to catalyze commercialization and foster a culture of innovation.
This article aims to provide a comprehensive knowledge and understanding of the Sub ledger accounting (SLA) in Oracle E-Business Suite (EBS) R12. It uncovers some of implementation tips and techniques and also shows how users can meet their financial and reporting needs using SLA.
The article highlights how to use SLA functionality to automate and control various scenarios using specific business rules.
This article aims to provide a comprehensive knowledge and understanding of the Sub ledger accounting (SLA) in Oracle E-Business Suite (EBS) R12. It uncovers some of implementation tips and techniques and also shows how users can meet their financial and reporting needs using SLA.
The article highlights how to use SLA functionality to automate and control various scenarios using specific business rules.
Seventh issue carries features like Happenings at IACC; US Investments in India; India Investments in US; Indo-US Corporate News; International Buyer Program- 2013 Trade show etc.
Download this Issue http://goo.gl/m6Ggy
Nuvolab seminar for Accelmed 2014: "Approaching investors"Nuvolab
DETAILS of THE SEMINAR:
Title: ACCELMED WEBINAR "Approaching Investors"
Time: 29/7/2014 - 14.30 to 15.30
Trainer: Francesco Inguscio, Nuvolab srl
Objective: The webinar on "Approaching investors"will help start-ups understand the process to fund a new company, identify different funding possibilities and know about process and tacite rules to approach and negociate a deal with an investor.
Contents:
- Overview
- An inconvenient truth
- Finding funding: different sources
- How to approach investors
- Conclusions
Francesco Inguscio - Bio
Francesco Inguscio is CEO and founder of Nuvolab, one of the main venture accelerator for startups in Italy. In 2010 he worked for M31, one of the most important business incubator in Italy as Business Development Director of its Silicon Valley branch, M31 USA. Formerly, he has been working both for the US Market Access of San Jose, a first rate international start-ups incubator in Silicon Valley, as business developer, and for the Angels’ Forum of Palo Alto, a leading business angel network in California, as financial analyst. In March 2010 he was awarded with his team of VRMedia, at Stanford University, with the Mind The Bridge prize, as the most innovative high tech startup in Italy. Previously, among others, he succeeded in working as research fellow in School of Advanced Studies Sant’Anna of Pisa (2009); as analyst IBM Global Business Services (2008) on market planning and IP management projects; as business strategy analyst in Accenture Business Consulting (2006), where he was involved in several projects concerning marketing and strategy analysis for the banking & insurance industry, and in the development of new financial products; he also worked in Prometeia (2005), a financial firm where he supported the development of innovative financial products and the creation of risk management tools for the banking industry. Francesco earned a BA in Management & Finance magna cum laude in 2003 and a MA in Finance magna cum laude in 2005, both from the University of Padova. In 2008, he got a Master in Innovation Management cum laude at the School Sant’Anna of Pisa. Currently; in 2010 he earned a Certificate in Technology Entrepreneurship at the Santa Clara University (CA), supported by the Fulbright BEST Program Grant.
Corporate Structuring and Fundraising for Single Purpose VehiclesRiveles Wahab LLP
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The answer is simply the often overlooked and misunderstood “SPV.” Essentially, the SPV or “Single Purpose Vehicle” is an entity that is structured to take in investor monies towards funding a singular dedicated project or opportunity. Indeed, a great majority of real estate finance projects, and a variety of other project finance opportunities essential to the U.S. economy, are at least partly funded by SPVs. Furthermore, with the advent of crowdfunding and “general solicitation” under the JOBS Act, the SPV’s role in financing a variety of projects and operating companies cannot be overstated.
Seventh issue carries features like Happenings at IACC; US Investments in India; India Investments in US; Indo-US Corporate News; International Buyer Program- 2013 Trade show etc.
Download this Issue http://goo.gl/m6Ggy
Nuvolab seminar for Accelmed 2014: "Approaching investors"Nuvolab
DETAILS of THE SEMINAR:
Title: ACCELMED WEBINAR "Approaching Investors"
Time: 29/7/2014 - 14.30 to 15.30
Trainer: Francesco Inguscio, Nuvolab srl
Objective: The webinar on "Approaching investors"will help start-ups understand the process to fund a new company, identify different funding possibilities and know about process and tacite rules to approach and negociate a deal with an investor.
Contents:
- Overview
- An inconvenient truth
- Finding funding: different sources
- How to approach investors
- Conclusions
Francesco Inguscio - Bio
Francesco Inguscio is CEO and founder of Nuvolab, one of the main venture accelerator for startups in Italy. In 2010 he worked for M31, one of the most important business incubator in Italy as Business Development Director of its Silicon Valley branch, M31 USA. Formerly, he has been working both for the US Market Access of San Jose, a first rate international start-ups incubator in Silicon Valley, as business developer, and for the Angels’ Forum of Palo Alto, a leading business angel network in California, as financial analyst. In March 2010 he was awarded with his team of VRMedia, at Stanford University, with the Mind The Bridge prize, as the most innovative high tech startup in Italy. Previously, among others, he succeeded in working as research fellow in School of Advanced Studies Sant’Anna of Pisa (2009); as analyst IBM Global Business Services (2008) on market planning and IP management projects; as business strategy analyst in Accenture Business Consulting (2006), where he was involved in several projects concerning marketing and strategy analysis for the banking & insurance industry, and in the development of new financial products; he also worked in Prometeia (2005), a financial firm where he supported the development of innovative financial products and the creation of risk management tools for the banking industry. Francesco earned a BA in Management & Finance magna cum laude in 2003 and a MA in Finance magna cum laude in 2005, both from the University of Padova. In 2008, he got a Master in Innovation Management cum laude at the School Sant’Anna of Pisa. Currently; in 2010 he earned a Certificate in Technology Entrepreneurship at the Santa Clara University (CA), supported by the Fulbright BEST Program Grant.
Corporate Structuring and Fundraising for Single Purpose VehiclesRiveles Wahab LLP
What do securities syndications and fundraising for real estate, restaurant ventures, film ventures, theme parks and a variety other project finance opportunities have in common?
The answer is simply the often overlooked and misunderstood “SPV.” Essentially, the SPV or “Single Purpose Vehicle” is an entity that is structured to take in investor monies towards funding a singular dedicated project or opportunity. Indeed, a great majority of real estate finance projects, and a variety of other project finance opportunities essential to the U.S. economy, are at least partly funded by SPVs. Furthermore, with the advent of crowdfunding and “general solicitation” under the JOBS Act, the SPV’s role in financing a variety of projects and operating companies cannot be overstated.
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Are you ready to make that leap from bootstrapping to investment capital? If you're ready to accelerate the growth of your startup, check out this presentation from Kristine Di Bacco, Associate with Fenwick and West, LLP (www.fenwick.com) and Sirk Roh, COO for Early Growth Financial Services (www.earlygrowthfinancialservices.com), which covers how to take your startup to the next level of financing -- including an in-depth look at convertible promissory notes and term sheets.
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Primer on raising seed capital for first time and experienced startup founders and employees. In this slideshare, I provide insight into the following questions:
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This Business Improvement Proposal was created by WebIT2 Consultants (Sarah Killey, Donald Gee, Mark Cottman-fields, Darren Cann and Sean Marshall) for the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) Library.
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In this report you will find some background information of our hospital and a summery of our achievements and challenges in 2008.
2. Contents
WELCOME.............................................................................................................................................................................................. 8!
REPORT SUMMARY .............................................................................................................................................................................. 9!
IDENTIFYING THE GAP....................................................................................................................................................................... 12!
The Current Model .......................................................................................................................................................................... 12!
Venture Capital .............................................................................................................................................................................. 14!
Angel Capital ................................................................................................................................................................................. 18!
Federal Programs .......................................................................................................................................................................... 20!
Crowdfunding ................................................................................................................................................................................ 22!
A New Model of Early Stage Capital.............................................................................................................................................. 23!
DEFINING THE GAP: STUDY OF CURRENT GAP FUNDING PRACTICES...................................................................................... 26!
Report Overview, Methods, and Participation.............................................................................................................................. 26!
Method and Participant Summary ................................................................................................................................................. 26!
Report Participant Summary.......................................................................................................................................................... 27!
Data Collection and Analysis ......................................................................................................................................................... 30!
Report Structure ............................................................................................................................................................................ 30!
Definition of Fund Types................................................................................................................................................................ 32!
By Region ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 36!
Source and Sustainability .............................................................................................................................................................. 38!
Source of Funds ............................................................................................................................................................................ 38!
Projected Lifetime of Fund............................................................................................................................................................. 44!
Initial Size of Fund ......................................................................................................................................................................... 45!
Sustainability of funds.................................................................................................................................................................... 48!
Management and Structure ............................................................................................................................................................ 50!
Management of Gap Funds ........................................................................................................................................................... 50!
Funding Vehicle and Financial Expectations ................................................................................................................................. 52!
Funding Cycle, Projects Funded, and Amount Funded per Project............................................................................................... 55!
Process ............................................................................................................................................................................................ 58!
Promotion and Proposal ................................................................................................................................................................ 61!
Evaluation and Decision Making ................................................................................................................................................... 63!
Resource Allocation....................................................................................................................................................................... 70!
Gap Fund Support Programs......................................................................................................................................................... 74!
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3. Impact ............................................................................................................................................................................................... 77!
Process Indicators ......................................................................................................................................................................... 78!
Building a Community of Innovation .............................................................................................................................................. 82
Business Formation and Job Creation .......................................................................................................................................... 84!
Financial Returns and Attraction of Capital ................................................................................................................................... 86!
Success Stories .............................................................................................................................................................................. 89!
MTG 2011 Participants .................................................................................................................................................................... 98!
! Works Cited .................................................................................................................................................................................... 99!
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4. TABLE OF FIGURES
Figure 1: Traditional Model of Early Stage Capital ................................................................................................................................ 12!
Figure 2: Venture Capital Landscape .................................................................................................................................................... 16!
Figure 3: Angel Capital Landscape ....................................................................................................................................................... 19!
Figure 4: New Model of Early Stage Capital.......................................................................................................................................... 24!
Figure 5: Overview of Participation........................................................................................................................................................ 29!
Figure 6: Defining the Gap .................................................................................................................................................................... 31!
Figure 7: Fund Type Breakdown (by type, size of institution, region).................................................................................................... 35!
Figure 8: Vintage Year and Growth Rates............................................................................................................................................. 37!
Figure 9: Sources of Funds ................................................................................................................................................................... 42!
Figure 10: Breakdown of Sources by Individual Funds ......................................................................................................................... 43!
Figure 11: Lifetime of Funds.................................................................................................................................................................. 45!
Figure 12: Lifetime of Fund compared to Source of Fund .................................................................................................................... 45!
Figure 13: Initial Size of Funds .............................................................................................................................................................. 47!
Figure 14: Sustainability of Gap Funds ................................................................................................................................................. 50!
Figure 15: Management of Funds ......................................................................................................................................................... 51!
Figure 16: Form of Funding and Financial Expectations ....................................................................................................................... 53!
Figure 17: Funding Cycle ...................................................................................................................................................................... 56!
Figure 19: Projects Funded per Cycle and Amount Funded per Project ............................................................................................... 57!
Figure 20: Gap Fund Process ............................................................................................................................................................... 58!
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5. Figure 21: Promotion Strategy............................................................................................................................................................... 62!
Figure 22: Criteria for Selection............................................................................................................................................................. 65!
Figure 23: Yield Rate............................................................................................................................................................................. 67!
Figure 24: Advisory Board Overview ..................................................................................................................................................... 68!
Figure 25: Advisory Board Make-up (Individual Funds) ........................................................................................................................ 69!
Figure 26: Use of Funds ........................................................................................................................................................................ 72!
Figure 27: Sample Budgets ................................................................................................................................................................... 73!
Figure 28: Gap Support Programs ........................................................................................................................................................ 76!
Figure 29: General Expectation Timeline for Impact ............................................................................................................................. 78!
Figure 30: Process Indicator Model....................................................................................................................................................... 79!
Figure 31:Process Indicators Participant Overview............................................................................................................................... 79!
Figure 32: Process Indicators by Fund Type......................................................................................................................................... 80!
Figure 33: Gap Fund Commercialization % compared to Fund Considerations ................................................................................... 82!
Figure 34: Building a Community of Innovation..................................................................................................................................... 83!
Figure 35: Business Formation and Job Creation ................................................................................................................................. 85!
Figure 36: Summary of Financial Returns and Attracted Capital .......................................................................................................... 87!
Figure 37: Financial Return Ratios ........................................................................................................................................................ 88!
Figure 38: Attracted Capital (Leverage Ratios) ..................................................................................................................................... 88!
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6. Table 1: Sub-analysis of Seed Stage Venture Capital .......................................................................................................................... 17!
Table 2: Response Rate........................................................................................................................................................................ 27!
Table 3: Type of Fund by Size of University.......................................................................................................................................... 34!
Table 4: Sample Checklist for Process Evaluation................................................................................................................................ 60!
Table 5: Summary Checklist for Selection Criteria ................................................................................................................................ 61!
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7. REPORT SUMMARY
Innovation is an exercise in progress. Through successes and failures it is the one force that can truly dictate our reality and shape a
future of possibilities. Ideally, innovation delivers new products, services, talent, and inspiration to the market while sustaining and
growing a society capable of procuring them; however, this opportunity is dependent on an educated working class, breakthrough
technologies, and ideas that can grow existing companies and that drive new venture and industry creation. Research universities
are perhaps the only source that can deliver all of these.
Through education, access to expertise, licensable technologies, and spin-out companies, research universities shape the future of
innovation. For example, according to the Association of University Technology Managers(AUTM) [1], a professional organization for
university technology transfer professionals, since the passage of the Bayh-Dole Act in 1980, research universities have:
• Added 4,350 licensed products to the market
• Spun out more than 6,000 companies (and are currently averaging more than 500 new start-ups a year)
• Created 279,000 advanced jobs in the US (from 1996-2007)
• Impacted GDP by $187B, and gross industrial output by $457B (from 1996-2007)
While universities provide talent and incremental, product-improving technology for companies of all sizes, they have a unique role in
assisting small businesses and spinning out job-creating start-ups. A recent report from the Kauffman Foundation [2] suggests that
new firms add 3 million jobs in the first year, while older firms lose 1 million jobs annually. With the shift in focus of large
multinationals from developed economies to emerging markets, start-up companies, and therefore research universities, have never
been more important to the type of growth that the US, and other countries, will need to develop future opportunities and prosperity.
Yet, even with historical success as a contributor to innovation and economic creation, the future ability of research universities to
support this innovation is threatened, or at least constrained, by the lack of early stage capital (and support) available to transition
government and industry sponsored research from the lab to the marketplace. This “gap” extends from where the government
funding of basic research ends to where existing companies or investors are willing to accept the risk to commercialize the
technology. The negative result is a large portion of economic creation that goes unrealized simply because it isnʼt funded and
supported.
In response, universities are developing or partnering with gap funding programs as a solution to address this issue—a strategy to
relieve a bottleneck in the innovation system that rests between concept and commercialization where other forms of capital wonʼt or
arenʼt structured to go. These gap funding programs are often initiated by the universities themselves as an extension of their
technology commercialization efforts and combine talent and capital around the goal of progressing innovation. This report will
8. demonstrate that university gap funding should be a priority for future innovation practices and policies because of its ability to not
only catalyze the commercialization of technology, but for its ability to develop a culture of innovation.
The report will begin with an updated version of the university (or early stage) technology funding landscape that positions gap
funding relative to other forms of traditional, emerging and disruptive sources of early stage capital. This new model is more
representative of technology development and commercialization and takes into account the under-represented, yet vital
translational research and proof of concept stages of technology development that take place prior to any commercialization.
Next, it will take an in-depth look at the functionality of 63 gap funding programs across 40 organizations, which creates a roadmap
for current and aspiring fund managers to develop gap funding programs and presents benchmarks for policymakers to support these
initiatives. While primarily focused on US programs, the report also includes examples of non-US funds and externally-partnered gap
fund programs through accelerators and state-based funds. This analysis is joined with perspectives from fund managers, success
stories, and past experiences with over 40 additional gap funds.
Finally, this report will suggest and explore various impacts, from a subsection of the survey participants, that depict the real value of
gap funding initiatives, including:
• High commercialization rates
o 76-81% of funded projects commercialized on average
• Attraction of early stage capital
o $2.8B leveraged from public and private investment sources
• Business formation and job creation
o 395 new start-up companies
o 188 technology licenses to existing companies
o 7,761 new jobs, at cost of $13,600 gap fund dollars per job
• Building a community of innovation
o Thousands of faculty and students engaged in the process
o Incorporate networks of technical and business professionals in the evaluation, mentorships, and leadership of these
technologies
• Organizational returns
o $75M returned to the organizations through repayments, royalties, and equity sales
o Maximize resource allocation and downstream savings, by permitting early failures through exploratory and evaluation
tactics
o Empower universities to continue to take risks that support the type of breakthroughs that define our present, and the
type of innovation that will carry us into the future
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9. Introducing Fund Types
The “gap” in gap funding refers to a vast shortage in capital and other commercialization support to identify, evaluate, and deliver
university technology to the marketplace. Defining this “gap” too broadly (e.g. “Valley of Death” or “between basic research and the
market”) oversimplifies the complexities of the situation and clouds the path to resolution; therefore, we propose and will demonstrate
a more actionable, segmented system based on real observations.
Gap funding approaches to the larger “gap” can be broken down into a system of four fund types, each with individual characteristics,
structures, and commercialization priorities. Adopting this vantage leads to a schematic model (Fig.6) with three main advantages:
• Scalable: Aligns with the existing university technology commercialization process, and other early-stage technology and
product development processes
• Customizable: Opens up the opportunity for universities to create an individual approach that is based on the specific
needs and capabilities of their own institutions at each stage of the innovation process
• Relatable: Creates a system that is identifiable by the all stakeholders of early-stage innovation (public and private), and
allows them an opportunity to identify their role as a partner in the process
Figure 6: Defining the Gap
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10. Advisory Board Make-up by Individual Funds
Translational Research Proof of Concept
100 % % 100 %
80 80
60 60
40 40
20
20
0
0
Business Formation Business Growth
100% 100 %
80 80
60 60
40 40
20 20
0 0
Tech Transfer Office/Central Staff
Technical/Scientific Professionals
Business- Corporate/Entrepreneurial
Business- Investor
Figure 25: Advisory Board Make-up (Individual Funds)
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11. The application of this framework provides a simple way to:
• observe the current state of a single or group of gap funding programs and compare it to other programs
• forecast the future opportunity relative to the experiences to date
Each program can be observed by current stage, which would be the percentage of total deals in all nodes, or by opportunity, by only
taking into account those projects that have already been initiated.
As an example, a subsection of the survey participants supplied full process indicators for 1,742 projects (Fig. 31). Imagine that this
was a single fund. As a representation of the current fund state, you might say that the fund has commercialized 33% of the projects
(27% start-ups, 6% licenses to existing companies), decided not to pursue 40% of the projects, and is still evaluating 27%. However,
based on the current commercialization rates of projects that have been initiated applied to all projects, we forecast that moving on
the projects still in process would result in an opportunity of 145 more start-ups and 73 more licenses to existing companies.
Therefore, this exercise is not only a way to represent the current state of the gap fund results, but also an effective tool to illustrate
opportunity to leadership.
Commercialized
27% 395 Start-up
31%
583
6%
e nt 15
%
Projects in Initiated urr ity
C un
Process 33
% ort
188 License to
p
Op
% Existing Company
46
73%
1,742 Projects 468 1,274
40 Waive/
%
54
%
Cu
rre Did Not Pursue
27% Current Op nt
po
rtu
nit
y
691
Figure 31:Process Indicators Participant Overview
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12. innovosource is an awareness and disruptive strategy firm that works with research universities and their key innovation
partners (high-tech companies, early stage investors, and government agencies) to develop new opportunities for
interaction.
As part of our vision to shape the future of our partners and clients, we launch regular conversation-building initiatives like
Mind the Gap. These discussion platforms challenge convention through the exploration of emerging topics that are vital
to the future of university innovation.
Our goal is to transition this knowledge into understanding that supports the success of our clientsʼ operations, and that
advocates for the university innovation community at a programmatic- and policy-level.
Thank you for joining the conversation. We look forward to working with you for the future!
CONTACT US:
Phone: 612 280 2462
Email: connect@innovosource.com
Web: http://www.innnovosource.com
Twitter: @innovosource
FOR MORE ON GAP FUNDING:
Web: www.gapfunding.org
LinkedIn Group: mindthegap
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