|
Sandia serves as a model in the U.S. for bringing technology from a research and development institution to the marketplace. - Bill Drohan, Executive Director, Association of University Research Parks PartnershipsLab Spinout Thrives with TVC's HelpIt wasn’t easy, but once Gary Selwyn, a former Los Alamos National Laboratory physicist, attained the license to the plasma technology he’d invented at the lab, partnerships and venture money followed. Selwyn used the services of Technology Ventures Corporation to hone his business plan, and took entrepreneurship classes at the nonprofit. Through perseverance and hard work, ApJet, which launched in the Santa Fe Business Incubator, landed $3 million in funding and later a partnership with a large textile producer. It also received a Small Business Technology Transfer grant from the United States Air Force. |
||
Partnership OpportunitiesFrom commercialization agreements with the national laboratories to research affiliations with university departments, Metro New Mexico's robust science and technology community bolster industry clusters. Venture capitalists have discovered the abundant talent here in the form of technology-oriented entrepreneurs. Many companies find their start in an incubator or research park. Both of New Mexico's two national laboratories have executed multiple Cooperative Research and Development Agreements (CRADA) and other programs as part of their mission to deliver research products to private industry.
Commercialization Programs
|
||