Caltech’s Adventures in Entrepreneurism

By Michael Rogers

For much of Caltech’s history, entrepreneurship was not exactly a dirty word, but one certainly didn’t hear it used on campus much. In the past few years, however, many students and faculty at the Institute have either started a company or are hatching plans to do so. There are numerous reasons—both inside and outside Caltech—for this swelling interest in starting companies. But one thing seems certain. Even with downturns in technology stocks and the deflated prospects of many “dotcom” companies, the interest in starting commercial ventures out of Caltech will not slow down anytime soon.

Investigators at Caltech have always been focused on making fundamental insights and discoveries. While the Southern California aerospace industry grew out of Caltech engineering, Caltech usually left commercialization to others. A steady stream of government funding helped insulate Caltech from the business world, but then the stream started to slow down during the 1990s. And with the high-technology explosion that has erupted since the 1980s, along with a flood of venture capital, the notion that academic science could distance itself from commercial applications changed.



John Baldeschwieler, entrepreneurial mentor.

The changes at Caltech have also been student driven, according to John Baldeschwieler, the J. Stanley Johnson Professor and Professor of Chemistry, Emeritus, who has spearheaded many entrepreneurial activities on campus and has started six companies himself. “In the early 90s, the traditional path of going from grad school to teaching and research became less frequent after cutbacks in defense and federal spending. And jobs at industrial labs became harder to get. This was balanced by a huge growth in start-up companies. So students understood the change in career mix, leading to a natural transformation.”

In recent years, more Caltech faculty members have become entrepreneurial, translating their research projects into commercial products and occasionally start-up companies. More students are interested in pursuing careers with new business ventures or in starting their own companies than ever before. The Institute has started to adjust.

In 1995, Caltech took a big step toward encouraging the entrepreneurial spirit when it formed the Office of Technology Transfer (OTT) to foster and promote start-ups and licensing activity at Caltech. Before the office was formed, the Institute would receive from its faculty approximately 65 invention disclosures a year. In 1999, the OTT received 143 invention disclosures, and last year, it received 157 invention disclosures.

The Institute has a long history of protecting its inventions through patents, and last year, 115 patents were issued to Caltech, up from 110 the year before. In the past few years, licensing efforts have increased dramatically, and currently more than 50 patent licenses and options are executed each year.

A start-up is a special case of a license, since no company could get off the ground, let alone survive, based on a single product. Caltech’s “grubstake” program assists faculty members who may have a project that is commercially viable by providing funds ranging from $30,000 to $50,000 to cover the costs of the project for one year to determine its feasibility. If successful, and if the project supports a start-up, Caltech may aid the faculty member/entrepreneur in seeking funding from venture capitalists, corporations, wealthy private individuals (so-called angels), or groups interested in supporting research in its very early stages to take the project from feasibility to a working prototype.

Since most start-ups are based upon technology developed with federal support, the grubstake program serves as a catalyst. Once a company has been formed, the research is done in labs outside Caltech, although some Caltech facilities are available on a fee-for-use basis. When a company is formed to commercialize the project, the expectation is that both Caltech and the faculty member spearheading the project—and possibly the postdocs and students integrally involved—will have an equity stake in the company.



Larry Gilbert, director of
Caltech’s Office of Technology Transfer.

Caltech currently hatches about 10 start-ups a year, a pace that few other academic institutions can match, according to Larry Gilbert, director of the Office of Technology Transfer. “When I came here in 1995, any entrepreneurial activity that was done at all was done out the back door,” says Gilbert. “Now, many of the faculty are eager to work with us. And the new programs at Caltech provide enormous benefits to students. They will be better prepared to enter the workplace and can be part of start-ups themselves.”

Caltech is good at launching spin-offs, because its basic research leads to new technologies and discoveries, which naturally lend themselves to products and sometimes companies. Caltech is also primed as an incubator for spin-offs because of its interdisciplinary approach to research, where there are no walls within or between departments. So in an area like the biological sciences, where the skills of computer scientists, mathematicians, and control theorists can help modern molecular geneticists make sense out of the huge data sets being produced by the human and other genome projects, Caltech is poised to exploit this information.

Recent Caltech start-ups range from high-tech companies like Xencor, which uses computers to design gene sequences to improve a gene’s properties for use by companies to make drugs, industrial enzymes, and agricultural biotechnology products, to consumer-products companies like Materia, which uses a Caltech discovery of a new catalyst to make a plastic with unique properties for use in diverse applications, such as sports equipment and pheromones.

The Office of Technology Transfer helps these companies get off the ground by assisting in filing patents, preparing business plans, finding sources of financing, identifying intellectual property firms, CPA firms, and real estate firms, and assisting in other aspects of launching a company.

Besides offering assistance to Caltech faculty who are starting a company, Gilbert organized a series of seminars in the summer of 1999, geared primarily for students, in which several entrepreneurs outlined the process for starting a company. Prior to that, in 1996, Baldeschwieler created a course in entrepreneurship called Entrepreneurial Development that has attracted more than 50 students each time it has been offered. “I go through the steps of building a company, discussing intellectual property, venture capital funding, accounting, writing a business plan, understanding markets, and other issues,” Baldeschwieler says. “We have great confidence in the technological understanding of our students, but business is about other things as well, such as managing people.”

To get credit for Baldeschwieler’s class, students must write a business plan, and some of these projects eventually become actual companies. The class also sponsors the $10K Business Plan Competition—in which two $10,000 prizes are awarded annually—to encourage, appraise, and promote business ideas from within the Caltech community. The prizes are presented by alumnus and entrepreneur Glenn Hightower ’72, MS ’73. In 1998, Caltech added two additional business classes—one on the management of technology and another on product design.

In 1994, Caltech students formed an Entrepreneur Club to promote entrepreneurship at Caltech. The club has a membership of approximately 250 students and regularly invites Caltech alumni who have formed businesses to speak about their experiences. The club also serves as a support network for budding entrepreneurs, providing job leads and other information about starting a company for students.

In 1997, the Caltech Alumni Association began a mentorship program to give students the chance to talk to experienced alumni about careers and other subjects. It recently evolved into connect@caltech, a program designed to help the Caltech community network with each other and with other people who can provide information about people and careers in science and technology. The Caltech Career Development Center also provides guidance for Caltech undergraduates, graduate students, and postdocs who are considering a career as an entrepreneur.

In addition, the Caltech Industrial Relations Center sponsors a wide range of programs, including seminars with executives of technology-based companies, and the Caltech/MIT Enterprise Forum, in which technology-based companies seeking help with growth and other issues present their cases to a panel of experts. The IRC sets aside a few seats at all of its programs so that students or faculty can sit in for free.

Recently opened on the Caltech campus is Pasadena Entretec, a nonprofit corporation that provides guidance and advice to entrepreneurs, helping them find financing, real estate, liability insurance, and other recources to speed the start-up process, and helping them locate their businesses in Pasadena and the San Gabriel Valley. Although Pasadena Entretec is independent of the Institute, “Caltech is supportive of Pasadena Entretec as a way of helping Caltech spin-offs once they graduate from campus,” said Stephanie Yanchinski, executive director of Pasadena Entretec. “We’re here to create a critical mass of companies to attract the financing and management needed to help companies grow.”

Caltech and Art Center College of Design in Pasadena also recently received a joint grant from the National Science Foundation’s Partnership for Innovation. The grant creates entrepreneurial fellowships with the goal of educating science, engineering, and design students about business issues so that they can transfer their skills and knowledge to commercial applications, and successfully develop new start-up business enterprises.

Many companies that originated in Caltech labs set up shop in Pasadena, partly because the founders may already be living here and partly because they often hire Caltech students or graduates. The city of Pasadena is also trying to promote high-tech start-ups by creating areas where new companies are encouraged through reduced red tape, lower fees, and other incentives. Examples include the biotechnology corridor near Huntington Hospital and a manufacturing area in East Pasadena.

Caltech officials say that when Caltech faculty, staff, or students are involved in new ventures, care must be taken to manage conflicts of interest and commitment. Faculty members might take a sabbatical in the early stages of a commercial enterprise, but they usually return to the Institute. To make sure that they do not compromise their positions at the Institute, faculty must agree not to become day-to-day managers of their company. Most assume advisory roles or board positions. Caltech has put in place an oversight committee to ensure that disclosure and review of potential conflicts are monitored.

Given the sudden wealth of many entrepreneurs, one would expect that the people behind the start-ups are attracted by the possibility of making money, but Gilbert says that this is not the primary reason Caltech faculty and students start companies. “The majority of the Caltech people who start companies truly believe that they can make a difference by saving lives or providing some benefit through their product. They believe that it will improve the well-being of the community. They usually don’t do it to make money. Of course, if the company is successful, they will.”

Adds Baldeschwieler, “We hope that the successful Caltech entrepreneurs will ultimately become major supporters of Caltech through grants and gifts to the Institute.”

Like the research that is behind the new Caltech spin-offs, the start-up experience of each of these companies has been unique. Take, for example, the stories of Ortel, Rainfinity, and Clinical Micro Sensors. Each story could comprise a separate article, and so it does in this special issue on entrepreneurism.

 

Article Links:

Ortel, in Three acts

RAINFINITY: From Outer Space to Interspace

Clinical Micro Sensors: Star Trek Meets the Human Genome

 

 

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