From University To Unicorn 2021

Page 5

Editorial

Entrepreneurs Invited Into The Universities

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Nobel laureate is a brilliant, absent-minded, solitary researcher – according to the traditional image of the academic dream anyway. Fortunately, this is not an accurate reflection of everyday life at the universities, where research is very often carried out in teams and partnerships. A university has several functions, and one function is to be a development lab for future enterprises. Traditionally, the university approach to transfer of knowledge to startups has been for the researcher to take on the role of entrepreneur. Not all researchers are keen to take on this role, however, and success stories are the exception rather than the rule, applying to only a very small percentage of researchers. More importantly, a large number of researchers do wish to see their research used commercially even though they prefer leaving the management of the commercialisation process to others, concentrating their own efforts on continued university research. To capitalise on this great spinout potential, universities across Denmark, supported by the Danish Industry Foundation, have established the Open Entrepreneurship initiative encouraging and supporting commercialisation teams and partnerships – resembling the modern research process, where research is no longer carried out by an army of one either. Open Entrepreneurship is based on US experience showing that, when done the right way, bringing entrepreneurs and researchers together will result in the creation of more startups based on research output and new technology. And these startups will transform research into solutions benefitting individuals, society and the environment. In this connection, it is vital that universities invite entrepreneurs into the

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Jes Broeng Programme Director for Open Entrepreneurship and Director for DTU Entrepreneurship (DTU – Technical University of Denmark)

universities to meet the researchers and establish a collaboration which will allow both parties to contribute with their main strengths. The point being that the researchers may continue concentrating on their research while leaving the spinout of research output and technology to the entrepreneurs – and avoid being spun out of the universities themselves! Results are, in effect, achieved through this facilitation of an open relation between university researchers and the business sector. Also, good ideas typically emerge on the frontiers of knowledge, which means that new magic may arise when industry domain knowledge meets the latest technologies from the world of research. We establish a relation where two parties systematically bring their special competences, from very different worlds, to the table with the common goal of setting up a startup or

developing a new business area. This is a lengthy process, and it may take months or even years before the business idea is sufficiently developed and ready for the commercial market. Since the establishment of Open Entrepreneurship in 2017, it has been instrumental in the formation of +60 startups, and many more are in the pipeline. The Open Entrepreneurship initiative is also part of the life science strategy of the Danish government (adopted in May 2021) with a view to commercialising Danish research outputs and creating new life science growth enterprises and jobs. Consequently, I see the continued development of an ecosystem encompassing both researchers and entrepreneurs as an exciting next step for the universities. This development is also taking place in other countries and is, therefore, already a competition parameter. Fortunately, Denmark is well on its way.

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Articles inside

Investors Are Flocking to Universities: “The Startups That Are Willing to Listen Are The Ones Who’ll Make It”

5min
pages 42-43

AI ideas are booming – but how do you protect them?

2min
page 40

From discovery to commercial success: What Does It Take to Turn Research into Business?

4min
pages 38-39

Amunet Studio: From study internship to startup

3min
page 37

QuasiOS Is a Startup on a Mission to Beat Microsoft, with a Newer, More Secure Operating System for Robots

3min
page 36

Cybersecurity Has a Promising Future, and Cyber Hub Wants Denmark to Get a Piece of the Pie

3min
page 35

What Is The Danish Word for Silicon Valley?

4min
page 34

Serial Entrepreneur Commercialisation Should Be a Success Criterion for Research

3min
pages 32-33

ICDK: Turning Danish Ideas Into Global Solutions

6min
pages 30-31

Denmark Struggles to Retain International Graduates: “Fancy Phrases like ‘International Outlook’ Aren’t Going to Cut It”

4min
pages 28-29

Turn up the volume of your career

1min
pages 26-27

Aalborg University-Startup Wants To Revolutionize the Way We Treat Chronic Pain

3min
pages 24-25

Calling All Researchers: You Don’t Have to Stop Seeing Your Kids to Become an Entrepreneur

3min
pages 22-23

Excuse Me, But What’s The Purpose?

4min
pages 20-21

Students at Stibo Accelerator Are Encouraged to Ask: What If?

4min
pages 18-19

Entrepreneurial Hubs Are Increasingly Becoming Part of Danish Universities

3min
page 17

Entrepreneurship On The Syllabus

6min
pages 14-16

Expert Panel: How Do We Spawn More Succesful Startups From Universities?

5min
pages 12-13

Research at startup speed: How Syncsense Used Their University Thesis to Kickstart Their Company

3min
page 11

Alvenir: Research And Open Source Can Be Combined With a Commercial Startup

4min
page 10

"There Is Often a Disconnect Between Research and Business, but Why Not Do Both?”

10min
pages 6-9

Entrepreneurs Invited Into The Universities

2min
page 5

About: From University to Unicorn

1min
page 3
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