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Project Skyway seeking startups for first tech accelerator round

Minnesota's first tech accelerator, Project Skyway, is accepting applications through May 1 for its first three-month program, beginning in August.

For the inaugural round, Project Skyway will select ten software-as-a-service (SaaS) or mobile startups to receive mentorship, co-working space, $6,000 (per founder), two developers, and a connection to key players in Minnesota's emerging startup scene. In June, 25 semi-finalists will participate in a tech accelerator "boot camp," after which the ten finalists will be chosen.

Project Skyway is seeking founders of companies that are beyond the idea stage, preferably with some sort of online presence, according to FAQs posted online.

"We want you to have done some market validation," says Project Skyway mentor Darren Cox. "Go out and talk to your potential customers � do some research, at the very least."

It wouldn't hurt to be in the revenue stage, either.

"We're no different than any other investor, in that folks with revenue actually have something to point to that folks without revenue can't," says Cox.

That said, Project Skyway has "some pretty strong differentiators" from other accelerators, says Cox. "We don't believe that you must be a coder to be a successful technology entrepreneur." Thus the access to two full-time developers per funded company.

The $6,000 per founder amounts to living expenses, explains Cox. "The money is there to allow you to focus 100 percent of your time on building your company."

The greatest value of the accelerator program to the chosen "Skywalkers" will be the mentorship, resources and connections, says Cox.

"That's how you build a company--you build a groundswell of support for the idea and for the people who are shepherding that idea," he says.

The first round is focused on SaaS and mobile "because we really want to dial into the type of startups that we know we can provide the most help to right away," according to the FAQ page. Future accelerator rounds might venture into hardware, cleantech, social ventures, and other types of startups.

In exchange for the program, Project Skyway receives 6�9 percent "founders shares" of common stock from participating (and successful, assuming) startups.

Source: Darren Cox, Project Skyway
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

NatureWorks biopolymer first certified biobased plastic in U.S.

Nature Works doesn't make the plastic products you might use on any given day, it makes the plastic that makes them.

The Minnetonka-based company makes it greener, as well, and it now has the USDA's BioPreferred Program stamp of approval to back that up.

NatureWorks, a 100-employee company owned by Cargill, is the first plastics manufacturer to earn the "certified bio-based" label, and one of only 11 of any kind in the country to receive the new certification. (The BioPreferred program itself was created in 2002.)

NatureWorks received similar certification in Europe last year, says Steve Sterling, president Sterling PR and PR rep for NatureWorks.

The company's Ingeo line of biopolymer is made from industrial-grade corn instead of oil. Its production uses 48 percent less energy than traditional plastics, says Sterling, and produces 60 percent less CO2.

The polymer is used in packaging, electronics, clothing, housewares, health and personal care items, semi-durable products, and the food service industry, according to a press release.

Founded in 2003, the company is growing in double rates in terms of sales, says Sterling. NatureWorks manufactures 70 million pounds of its biopolymer a year--far and away the most of any company doing so, he says.

Sterling notes that the certification puts products made with 100 percent Ingeo on the government's preferred purchasing list of bio-based products. The Secretary of Agriculture has designated 5,100 bio-based products; the USDA estimates there are as many as 20,000 currently being manufactured in the United States, according to the press release.

Source: Steve Sterling for NatureWorks
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

U of M licenses technology for noninvasive treatment of atherosclerosis

A new startup hopes to offer a safer and more effective treatment for atherosclerosis through its licensing of University of Minnesota medical technology.

Emad Ebbini, an electrical and computer engineering professor in the College of Science and Engineering at the University of Minnesota, led a team that developed the high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) technology, according to a U of M press release. The university says it has finalized a license agreement with startup International Cardio Corporation, who declined to comment for this article.

Atherosclerosis is a condition in which arteries become blocked by a buildup of plaque, usually treated with drugs or angioplasty.

By contrast, HIFU is a noninvasive, real-time ultrasonic imaging and localized treatment of tissue abnormalities which developers hope may have even broader applications, including the treatment of cancer.

The form of non-ionizing radiation localizes treatment to small areas (the size of a grain of rice or a sesame seed, states the release) at a much faster rate than other current systems such as MRI.

The technology links imaging and therapy by returning dynamic images that allow doctors to almost instantaneously refocus the energy at the target--an outcome that can be faster, more precise, and safer than invasive surgery or radiation therapy.

The equipment necessary for HIFU is less expensive than other imaging techniques, such as MRI, making it more accessible to doctors and less expensive for patients, says the release.

International Cardio Corporation may submit the technology to the FDA for testing later this year.

Source: University of Minnesota
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

Developers donate $500,000 of web redesign to nonprofits at Nerdery Overnight Challenge

Everyone was a winner, and nothing was lost but sleep, quips The Nerdery of its fourth annual Nerdery Overnight Website Challenge, March 26�27, at which 175 web development professionals donated approximately a half million dollars worth of web design to help nonprofits further their missions.

Eighteen web design teams worked from 9 a.m. Saturday to 9 a.m. Sunday, after which the winner was announced: team TST Media, for their redesign of Bloomington United for Youth's (BUY) website.

(The new site was not yet live as of April 6, but you can see before and after snapshots on BUY's challenge page.)

Speaking with The Line, Nerdery Communications Manager Mark Malmberg reiterated that "it's a win" for each of the web teams to be chosen from the 46 that applied to donate their time. The number of teams has steadily increased each year, from 11 to this year's 18.

"What drives that number up is we keep getting qualified teams that want to do this, and it's hard to turn them away," says Mamlberg.

Through the event's four-year history, $1.5 million of pro bono services have been delivered to 57 Minnesota nonprofits, not including the hundreds of hours of follow-up support that web teams pledge before entering.

Like its signature event, The Nerdery has grown since its 2003 founding; the Bloomington-based web development company employs just shy of 200 people and consumes enough caffeine in a week to kill five adults, according to its website.

The Nerdery has a smaller, 12-employee office in Chicago, as well, where it plans to host a similar challenge in the early summer, says Malmberg.

Source: Mark Malmberg, The Nerdery
Writer: Jeremy Stratton


2011 Minnesota Cup kicks off with call for ideas, businesses

Hey entrepreneurs: how does $50,000 sound? Good?

Well how about $30 million?

The first amount is the take-away for the winner of the 2011 Minnesota Cup competition, through which entrepreneurs pit their best ideas and business endeavors against one another in six categories.

The higher number is the amount of capital raised by companies that were Minnesota Cup finalists in 2009 and 2010.

Through May 20, the seventh annual Minnesota Cup is open for entries in six award divisions--High Tech, BioSciences, Clean Tech and Renewable Energy, Social Entrepreneurship, General, and Student--through a short online form.
 
Later, judges will select 8�10 semi-finalists from each division who will prepare full business plans and be paired with an industry-specific entrepreneurial mentor.

Division winners are awarded as much as $25,000 and the chance at the grand prize--another $25,000--in September.

While 50 grand and the exposure of winning is nothing to sneeze at, Minnesota Cup Co-founder Dan Mallin notes that the goal is really to "help 30 businesses get started in each category," whether a given business is just a good idea or an existing startup.

"Another good outcome is they might find out it really isn't a good idea," says Mallin.

Participants also benefit from mentorship and resources--far more of which exist in general for the state's entrepreneurs since the advent of the Cup six years ago, notes Mallin.

Two of those resources are the new 2011 partners Minnesota Angel Network and tech accelerator Project Skyway, which will offer the winner of the High Tech division a spot in its startup "boot camp."

Mallin says he sees momentum in the startup scene.

"The Cup is an attempt to be a conduit amongst the players and resources behind that momentum," he says.

That said, Mallin also sees a lot of room for improvement in state's entrepreneurial efforts. "We're being outspent by 30 other states in innovation," he says.

Source: Dan Mallin, Minnesota Cup
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

Exosite's deal with Fortune 200 firm Arrow extends platform to new markets, more users

"Like Twitter for machines" is the shorthand explanation Erik Rorvick gives for the company Exosite.

The Minneapolis-based machine-to-machine (M2M) company's cloud-based data platform connects users to real-world data from sensors and devices.

The conduit is Exosite's One Platform, and many more customers will be using it following the company's deal this month to partner with Fortune 200 company Arrow Electronics. Arrow serves as a supply channel partner for more than 1,200 suppliers and boasts 115,000 customers across a network of 340 locations in 52 countries.

Since its founding in 2009, Exosite has had its "head down" focusing on the development of the cloud-based platform, says Rorvick, Exosite's business development manager. A release in the past month of Exosite's One Platform means it can "push and pull data on any internet-connected device," says Rorvick. The platform is built to handle millions of users and devices concurrently, he says.

Exosite's core focus has been on industrial process, heavy embedded electronics, and the like. Customers might monitor poultry temperature, a patient's medical device, or a complex computer system, Rorvick says.

Applications for Arrow could range from a water-pump monitor for a hobbyist's fish pond to an enterprise software platform to launch a product or corporation.

He calls the partnership a "paradigm shift" for Arrow's business model, while Exosite gains access to Arrow's coast-to-coast sales team. The deal will significantly increase the number of users and puts Exosite in a very good position to grow and reach new markets, says Rorvick.

The big picture is the emerging economic trend of big corporations like IBM, Cisco, Microsoft and Hewlett Packard embracing the connected device and embedded internet, says Rorvick,??

"It's really exciting to see the really big players address and embrace and take some of the mystery out of it," he says.

Source: Erick Rorvick, Exosite
Writer: Jeremy Stratton


LocaLoop partnership will bring fast, affordable internet to remote areas

St. Paul-based LocaLoop is reaching across the globe--to Israel--to bring 4G broadband internet to rural and under-served areas of the Midwest.

LocaLoop announced last week a strategic marketing and technology agreement with the Israel-based network hardware firm Runcom. LocaLoop's cloud technology business management Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) platform, called aLoopNET, will be deployed using Runcom equipment.

LocaLoop founder and CEO Carl-Johan Torarp invented LocaLoop's 4G Mobile WiMAX/LTE enabling technology and founded the company in 2003 to provide products and solutions for 4G mobile broadband internet designed for the rural markets of the world.

On its website, LocaLoop states that it answers the question: "How can you build a profitable business delivering high-quality Broadband Internet service at an affordable subscriber price in low density areas both at home and on the go?"

The platform's cloud computing architecture is key to that, as it makes deployment of a virtual network operations center affordable for broadband internet service providers.

LocaLoop's target market is the approximately 50 million people in under-served and rural areas of the U.S. alone, according to its website.

The partnership with Runcom is "much more than a marketing and technology agreement," said Torarp in a press release. "Together we are able to deliver a powerful turnkey 4G wireless network solution with capabilities that we could not achieve individually."

The two companies will focus on the nine-state region of the upper Midwestern U.S. initially, and it may be the first of more joint ventures for LocaLoop. The company states on its website that it is currently in a testing phase on its own live 4G network and will begin roll-out with rural joint venture partners in the U.S. during midyear 2011.

Source: LocaLooop
Writer: Jeremy Stratton


8th Bridge raises $10 million in funding

2009 Minnesota Cup winner 8th Bridge (formerly Alvenda) looks to sustain its momentum following its recent $10 million in a series B funding round led by venture firm Trident Capital. Split Rock Partners also participated.

8thBridge's social commerce platform monetizes social media for some of the largest merchants in the world. The e-commerce pioneer opened the first Facebook retail store for 1-800-Flowers in July 2009. More merchants followed, and 8th Bridge-powered stores made $100,000 in daily sales by December 2010, according to the company's website.

The new round of funding grew out of "accelerated demand" from merchants, says CEO and Founder Wade Gerten in a press release. The funding will be used to enhance the company's technology platform, 8thBridge StoreCast.

Planned enhancements include improving the ability to receive highly personalized offers based on interests, to take advantage of special social promotions, and to receive rewards for advocating for favorite merchants.

8thBridge changed its name from Alvenda in January. The name "is a nod to the company's pioneering development of social graph-based commerce, stemming from the Seven Bridges of K�nigsberg, the historical mathematical problem that served as the genesis of Euler's Graph Theory," states the release.

Source: 8th Bridge
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

Regional Cleantech Open seeks next big ideas, entrepreneurs

The search to "find, fund and foster" entrepreneurs with big ideas in cleantech kicked off last week in the North Central region: the 2011 Cleantech Open.

The second annual business competition is a year-long program through which budding companies receive mentorship and training from local experts and gain exposure to investors. Participants compete in six cleantech categories: renewable energy, transportation, smart power and energy storage, energy efficiency, green building, and air/water/waste.

There are prizes for the regional winners, including the chance to compete in the national Cleantech Open for more than $250,000 in cash and services. The North Central region covers Minnesota, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Illinois, new to the region for the 2011 competition.

Last year, the North Central region contestants outnumbered all other regions but California, with more than 30 collaborations and 200 contributing professionals.

All four 2010 semi-finalists received funding, notes Justin Kaster, Cleantech Open North Central regional director. They included Minnesota startups New Water and EarthClean Corporation, whose innovative and environmentally responsible fire suppression earned them the 2010 Minnesota Cup title, as well.

The competition helps "drive innovation, create jobs, foster early-stage investment, and teach a more sustainable way of doing business," says Kaster in a press release.

Entries for the Cleantech Open are now being accepted online, and the North Central region is recruiting professional volunteers to assist as mentors, judges, and program committee members.

Source: Cleantech Open
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

Newly dubbed ABILITY Network adds jobs, services with 51,000-square-foot Downtown offices

The Minneapolis-based health-care/IT company formerly known as VisionShare began in February in its offices near the University of Minnesota and ended the month as ABILITY Network in its newly designed headquarters in Downtown Minneapolis' Butler Square.

The new 51,000-square-foot digs--designed to meet LEED Commercial Interior standards--reflect the 11-year-old company's physical growth. Now with 135 employees, ABILITY has added 100 jobs in the past few years and expects to add a hundred more in the next few, including dozens more jobs this year, says CEO Mark Briggs.

Meanwhile, the fresh moniker reflects the substantial growth and change of the business; after many years enabling secure internet Medicare transactions, ABIILTY has extended its services to more health-care providers.

ABILITY now connects 3,500 hospitals nationwide--about half the hospitals in the  country, says Briggs--as well as tens of thousands of other health-care facilities.

Furthermore, ABILITY now allows those customers to do more than just administer Medicare transactions, but to work with commercial payers or plans, says Briggs.

He characterizes the network as a "Google for doc[tors]" that "enables clinicians to be aware of the fragmented nature of their patients' clinical record," says Briggs.

"When I show up at the hospital for the first time, I start with a blank manila folder," he explains, "I've got health information scattered across the health-care network. There was no way, pre-ABILTIY, for the health-care-giver to know where all that information was."

ABILITY allows the care-giver to locate the information and bring it together, with patient consent and in a secure way that takes the HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) into account, Briggs notes.

The result is "more efficient health care that leads to better patient outcomes, lower costs [for both insurers and patients] and to take the same budget and provide care for more people instead of less-efficient care for fewer," he says.

Briggs notes that stimulus funding and the attention the current administration has given to health care have "been helpful in enabling health-care providers to have the resources to connect." IT advances have made the work possible.

"Only recently did the technology mature to the point where this became feasible," says Briggs, "and hospitals and doctors have funding to enable these types of networks to grow profitably."

Source: Mark Briggs, ABILITY Network
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

Education startup Naiku offers online assessment platform

Consider this reality: you're a high school math teacher. One hundred and sixty students cycle through your classroom every a day.

"How would you have any idea which students struggle with certain concepts?" asks Corey Thompson. "What we ask our teachers to do in that realm is not possible."

Thompson is co-founder and chief executive officer of Naiku, a local start-up offering an online education assessment platform that benefits both student and teacher, says Thompson.

Naiku ("teacher" in Lao) gives teachers a "classroom dashboard" that allows both summative assessment--what students know--as well as formative assessment--how they learned it. A formative assessment question might be: "What was the concept that this quiz tested you on?" offers Thompson.

The exercise in "meta-cognition" enriches the students' learning experience, he says. "It helps the students perform better, as well, because it makes them think about what they know and what they don't know."

Teachers can create assessments, share them with other teachers, and customize and organize the student data gathered.

A two-minute video on Naiku's website gives a quick overview of how the platform works.

Naiku was born last fall and is already being used by thousands of students, says Thomspon. In late February, Naiku announced a partnership with Austin, Texas-based Instruction-Driven Measurement Center (IDMC) to market and connect Naiku to more users. Thompson expects to add other partnerships in the near future.

Thompson met co-founder and cognitive psychologist Adisack Nhouyvanisvong while they were earning MBAs at the University of Minnesota. (Both graduated last year.) Kevin Sampers, a third co-founder, is Naiku's COO and VP of sales and marketing.

Naiku works in all major browsers and on all personal devices, Thompson says, including iPhone, iPod Touch, android, iPad and laptop.

Thompson sees schools embracing the use of personal devices more and more. He envisions that, in the near future, students will use their own devices, with subsidies for students that don't own devices, similar to free- and reduced-priced lunch.

"In the next year or two, it's all going to tip," says Thompson. "Student devices will be welcomed."

Source: Corey Thompson, Naiku
Writer: Jeremy Stratton



Upcoming events: data disaster, mobile march, momentum, launch, and beer

Momentum 2011: You Don't Have to Move Out of Your Neighborhood to Live in a Better One
Thursday, March 10, 7:30 p.m.
Ted Mann Concert Hall, 2128 S. Fourth St., Minneapolis
$20 ($15 for U of M students, staff, faculty, alumni, UMAA members)

"Eco-entrepreneur" Majora Carter headlines the March installment of Momentum 2011, hosted by the University of Minnesota's Institute on the Environment. The event bio describes Carter as "one of the nation's pioneers of environment-centered urban renewal and green-collar job training and placement."

Don Shelby will host the event, which will feature a performance by Ananya Dance Theatre. Other Momentum 2011 events will feature "environmental visionaries" in April and May.


Solutions Twin Cities Vol. 4
Friday, March 18, 7 p.m.
Capri Theater, 2027 W. Broadway Ave., Minneapolis
$8�16
See our March 2 article.


Mobile March
Saturday, March 19, 8 a.m.
Best Buy Corporate Offices, 7601 Penn Ave. S., Richfield
$40

The second annual Mobile March conference will be a "day dedicated to understanding mobile." The day-long conference offers two tracks: "developer and programming" for mobile developers and "marketing and use" for businesspeople.

A pre-conference demo, dinner and drinks will be held Friday, March 18 at CoCo, 213 E. 4th St. #400 in Saint Paul. The $40 registration fee covers both events.


Disaster Recovery: It's No Joke
Friday, April 1, 7:30�9:30 a.m.
Westin Hotel, 88 S. Sixth St., Minneapolis
Free.

IBM and VISI team up to present this breakfast seminar about disaster recovery solutions for businesses.


Launch.MN kickoff party
Saturday, April 2, noon�9 p.m.
International Market Square, 275 Market St., Minneapolis
Free

Launch.MN--a new nonprofit to support local entrepreneurs--will kick off with an all-day event described as "a coming-out party and social event for everyone who cares about improving entrepreneurial culture and early-stage business activity in Minnesota."


Stone Brewing Co.'s Stone Week--Minnesota
March 29�April 2
Various locations

OK, it's not exactly innovation, but it's new to us, and it's beer! To kick off its Twin Cities distribution, San Diego-based Stone Brewing Co. will be pouring at local watering holes for five days beginning March 29. The dozens of Stone Brewing beers will include "rarities from the darkest depths of our archives."

Writer: Jeremy Stratton

St. Paul startup MIDART takes aim at the future of broadcasting

Joe Tracy has a new paradigm for an old medium: television.

The name of his St. Paul startup MIDART is an acronym for the key elements of the company's strategic platform: mobile, internet, digital, authentication, retransmission and timing.

MIDART's goal is to acquire and operate "under-valued or over-leveraged" television stations around the country and capitalize on new technology, media, and revenue streams.

Tracy, a 25-year veteran of broadcast sales and management, left CW Twin Cities (WUCW) last September to devote himself full-time to MIDART. By mid-February, MIDART had raised more than a third of its $750,000-round equity goal, according to an SEC filing.

"It's a really, really interesting time to be in broadcasting," says Tracy. "Some guys are either shaking their head and getting out, or they're being squeezed out."

Instead, Tracy sees opportunity. While the past couple of years have been "some of the worst years broadcasting has had," he says, "behind that there is this new wave of technology that, in my opinion, represents the next wave of broadcasting growth."

MIDART's "three-screen" approach involves extending traditional broadcasting (and related revenue streams) to newer media models like mobile broadcasting and customized, interactive websites. As general manager at the local CW station, Tracy grew a successful mobile-texting strategy and instituted cross-media collaborations, with the online Star-Tribune, for example.

Tracy also hopes to maximize broadcast capacity with local programming on secondary channels (as in channel 11.2 or channel 2.4) and to capitalize on authentication and retransmission fees from cable companies or web-content providers, for example.

Add to Tracy's own experience MIDART's impressive list of collaborators, which includes meteorologist Paul Douglas and Digital River co-founder Todd Frostad, who have partnered to create Weather Nation and Singular Logic. Like other MIDART team members, the pair's expertise in technology and entrepreneurship fit nicely into key aspects of MIDART's business plan.

While MIDART aims to "streamline operations and content delivery," Tracy doesn't imagine a media-behemoth ownership model--a model that he says has played a part in broadcasting's recent decline.

"We need to buy a bunch of stations to create that economy of scale," he says, "but at the same time, you have to provide local programming that's relevant. If you're too macro, and you're just treating it as a business, then you're not a broadcaster anymore."

MIDART's next step is a big one: to start acquiring stations. Tracy expects to "close a deal or two" in the next few months.

Source: Joe Tracy, MIDART
Writer: Jeremy Stratton

Innovators and entrepreneurs hash out tech transfer issue at MOJO MN event

Agitators, innovators, evangelists and maybe even some angels (as in investors) gathered Feb. 23 for a MOJO Minnesota-hosted conversation on technology transfer.

At issue: how to bridge the gap between inventors and entrepreneurs and smooth the runway for the commercialization of innovations and intellectual property produced by Minnesota researchers.

The event took place on the U of M's West Bank campus. The panel of six, which was moderated by MOJO "agitator" Rick Brimacomb, represented the university (and Mayo Clinic) research side, the entrepreneur side, and someone in between:  recent U of M graduate-turned entrepreneur Alex Johansson, co-founder and CTO of the startup NewWater, LLC,

Jay Schrankler, executive director of the U of M's Office of Technology Commercialization, offered some statistics about the university's improving track record of "spinning off" companies--and ones that stay in Minnesota.

From 2001�2006, said Schrankler, 14 companies spun out of the university, of which four still exist. Of the147 jobs those companies created, 111 are in California now--an example of the tech-and-talent drain that was a key topic of the MOJO conversation.

By contrast, 23 companies have come out of the U of M since 2006, he said, 21 of which are still around. They account for 50 jobs, all of which are in Minnesota, according to Schrankler.

Early conversation addressed the success or failure of tech-transfer attempts.

"Success is a deal that doesn't fall through," said Jeff Carpenter, senior portfolio manager for Development Capital Networks. He outlined mistakes he sees companies making in the process of bringing research to market.

"The companies tend to � overestimate the stage of development, and they underestimate the cost and the time to get something to market."

Lee Jones, CEO in residence at the university's Venture Center, stressed the importance of similar expectations on the parts of the researchers and entrepreneurs.

"When I hear people say 'it's hard to get technology out of [the university],' what I really hear is that they, a) don't know how to access it, or b) they have expectations that they are getting more than [the concept of the technology].

"There's expectation that the development process has already taken place, or that the inventor is going to willingly hand over all of his information," she said.

Schrankler laid out the four elements necessary for a successful start-up company: the right technology, a good market for that technology, a good management team, and, of course, capital.

Johansson hit on a key point with his advice for entrepreneurs looking to license technology from the university.

"[The university's] one concern is the revenue that's going to get generated by this technology," he said, "and by licensing it to you, they are preventing anyone else from generating revenue with [that] technology."

Schrankler followed with a breakdown of revenue return: one-third rightly goes to the inventor, he said, and the rest goes back into research.

Later, conversation turned to the potential for technology to flee the state. While the university is strong in biotech research, "If you have a biotech invention, and you want to spin off a company, where is it going to end up?" asked Carpenter. "San Francisco or Boston."

Johansson noted that, of 40 recent, top-of-their-class graduates he knows, all have jobs, and only four are in this state.

Schrankler assured potential entrepreneurs that the university is trying to not send technology out of state--despite opportunities to do so--and he asked them to be patient.

"We have more potential companies in our pipeline right now than the system can handle," said Schrankler. "Have patience with us. The longer we can keep that company inside the university and work the problem so that it can stay here�"

An audience member asked why so much emphasis was put on biotech research at the university when the Twin Cities has stronger markets for other technology.

"We are the Silicon Valley of medical devices," said the audience member.

The argument was also made that the region's concentration of med-tech chokes off the potential for growth in other areas.

To this point, Carpenter advised entrepreneurs to diversify their interests in technologies.

"There's more here than just med-tech," he said. "Maintain what you've got with med-tech, but support all the other innovations out there."

"God bless you!" responded Darren Cox, founder and "chief evangelist" of Commerce and Search for Tech Transfer (CaSTT).

Earlier on, he had given prospective entrepreneurs some simple advice:

"Be curious � and figure out what it is that you're interested in that is going on at the U. It's a huge place, and they are some of the most amazing things that I've ever seen coming out of research.

"There are gold mines here, trust me," said Cox. "There are cash machines, and entrepreneurs who ignore the university's innovations are doing themselves a great disservice."

Source: MOJO Minnesota tech transfer conversation, Feb. 23
Writer: Jeremy Stratton


Kroll Ontrack "certifies" 1,000 firms--50 locally--with podcasts on data recovery, destruction

While Kroll Ontrack bills itself as the largest data recovery provider in the world, the Eden Prairie-based company's new Ontrack Data Recovery Partner Program is focused locally: at the level of the storefront, small business, and home.

The online certification program aims to better equip smaller IT equipment and services providers to handle data recovery and data destruction for small- and medium-sized businesses and home users, says Ken Gibson, Ontrack Data Recovery partnership channel manager.

Since the U.S. launch in December, more than 1,000 companies have completed the certification training, including about 50 in the Twin Cities, says Gibson.

The training process is simple and easy by design, he says. Organizations watch at least four of five free podcasts, available online. Topics include the basics of data recovery, how to present and sell data recovery services, data recovery in virtual environments, data destruction, and data management for Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft Office SharePoint servers.

Certified organizations are ramping up existing services or adding a new aspect to their businesses in an attempt to differentiate themselves from competitors, says Gibson.

Kroll Ontrack hopes to do the same with the program; while "lots of other partner programs exist," admits Gibson, he believes Kroll Ontrack "provides more value than extending a discount."

The training is designed to improve organizations' handling of data recovery needs--whether that involves performing the service themselves or knowing when and how to pass the work on to Kroll Ontrack.

The program also strengthens a partnership that obviously benefits both Kroll Ontrack and the organization. Certified partners receive promotions and discounts on software, as well as a 10 percent commission for pass-through referrals to Kroll.

Gibson notes specifically the training in data destruction--a growing concern and need as consumers and companies "churn through" hardware at an increasing pace.

"What do you do with that old [laptop]?" asks Gibson rhetorically. "What happens to the data? You need to include data destruction with any data plan," he says, "because you really are protecting the lifeblood of your company."

Source: Ken Gibson, Kroll Ontrack
Writer: Jeremy Stratton
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