Ross

Australia’s Innovation Puzzle

 

An interesting study of Australia’s innovation system and useful reading for those engaged in innovation was published by the Australian Government, Senate Economic References Committee, December 2015.

Simplifying universities complex IP policies

Of the five recommendations (below) one area that I believe requires significant attention is “measures to enhance collaboration and the free flow of knowledge between the university system and the private sector”. It is often the case that the transfer of IP to industry is hampered by complex IP policies & prohibitive initial costs. Perhaps other universities could learn from a leading example pioneered in the US & Israel: Jacobs Technion-Cornell Institute take a refreshingly straightforward approach to Intellectual Property (IP).

Their IP Model positions the Jacobs Institute as an investor in companies that spin out of the Runway program. Universities typically engage in lengthy negotiations to license technologies developed on campus, even when funding does not impose restrictions. In contrast, the Jacobs Institute gives companies an exclusive, perpetual and royalty-free license to use the technology they develop, in exchange for a stake in the company comparable to the value of the support provided by a “Runway Award”.

More info on the Jacobs Technion-Cornell Institute IP model here.

Low interest loans for startups

Another element that is currently missing from Australia’s innovation system is the availability of low-interest loans for Startups. There is currently great focus on VC and “Accelerator” programs, however, this is surely only one dimension of a vibrant innovation ecosystem?

From Skift:

Accelerators aren’t for every startup and many founding teams emerge from them no better than when they entered. There are more than 200 accelerator programs worldwide that have worked with more than 6,200 startups, according to accelerator data site Seed-DB. They’ve given more than $18 billion in funding and received more than $5 billion from more than 800 exits. Some 30 of the 235 accelerators on Seed-DB’s list have “accelerator” as part of their names.

Those figures may seem impressive in terms of the amount of funding delivered but there can be a substantial number of failures — as the number of exits indicates. For Techstars, a leading accelerator, more than 10 percent of its startups fail on average and other top accelerators have similar failure rates. That figure would be far lower than startups in general.

I would like to see opportunities for Australian Startups to access low interest loans to support promising business propositions.

The recommendations from the senate report on Australia’s innovation system

Recommendation 1

That the Australian Government commits to maintaining stable, coherent and effective administrative arrangements for innovation policies and programs, based on a long-term strategic framework and a target to lift investment in research and development to three per cent of GDP.

Recommendation 2

The establishment of an independent government agency with a mandate to administer and coordinate innovation system policies and programs. Such a body would be responsible for maintaining a continuous and consistent approach to innovation policy across the whole of government.

Recommendation 3 

That the Australian Government, as part of its long-term innovation strategy, includes policy options to address the structural and strategic barriers that inhibit innovation, including: measures to enhance collaboration and the free flow of knowledge between the university system and the private sector; increasing the size of the research and development workforce employed in industry; and ensuring that public funding to support science, research and innovation is long- term, predictable and secure.

Recommendation 4

The committee recommends that the Australian Government, working in collaboration with State and Territory governments, adopt a range of measures to support the role of local and regional innovation ecosystems.

Recommendation 5

The committee recommends that the education system be accorded a central focus in the Australian Government’s long-term innovation strategy, thereby acknowledging the central importance of the interplay between the STEM subjects and the humanities, social sciences and creative industries.

Innovation Wish-list

  1. Simpler IP policies from the university system.
  2. Low-interest loans for startups.
  3. Creative approaches to innovation support.

Refs:

The senate report was originally spotted by the Idea Spies here.

Ross.

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Ross

GrowAg : iugotec joins Australian Innovation Summit.

Collaborate & Innovate

iugotec Founder & Director Ross Farrell will attend the GrowAg Innovation Summit: Cultivating Excellence in Agriculture for our Farming Future.

AgTech Innovation

I am excited to join the top 100 innovators and leaders in agriculture at GrowAg. The  summit provides a great venue to develop new collaborations, formulate innovative ideas and an opportunity to share my vision for a new generation of sensor systems.

  Advanced Sensor Systems

Opportunities for state-of-the-art chemical “fingerprinting” sensor systems in Food & Agriculture include applications such as:

  • Real-time quality grading of produce .
  • Monitoring of storage facilities.
  • Pest detection.
  • Contamination & Taint detection.
  • Crop health & early disease warning systems.

Turn Data into Decisions

This new generation of sensor technologies (developed in pioneering medical & security applications) brings significant new opportunities for advanced quality control & decision support. By combining sensors with data science we can develop & deploy highly sophisticated systems that integrate and as a result optimise across the supply chain, from grower to consumer. Following the Systems Engineering mantra: If you cannot measure it, you cannot control it, if you cannot control it you cannot improve it.

The Summit

GrowAg is hosted by the Australian Government Department of Agriculture and Water Resources and the Rural Research and Development Corporations. It will bring together Australia’s sharpest and most innovative leaders in agriculture to share ideas, discuss the opportunities and challenges facing the sector and identify how tomorrow’s leaders can capitalise on the opportunities.

The Summit will advance the contribution of our farming leaders and agricultural professionals towards a dynamic, competitive and prosperous agricultural sector by:

  • developing knowledge and skills for utilising adopting new technologies; innovative business and investment strategies; and developing leadership and entrepreneurial skills
  • facilitating wider discussion and consideration of the opportunities, barriers and roles for farmers in agriculture; and
  • providing an opportunity for sharing knowledge, a platform for innovation and an entrepreneurial environment for our future farming leaders.

In summary, we have tremendous opportunities to harness the potential of advanced sensor systems & turn data into knowledge-based actionable decisions. Collaborate & Innovate. I am excited about the future!

Ross.

 

More information on GrowAg here.

Rural Research and Development Corporation

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