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NEVADA. A Quick Overview of SBIR/STTR. Dr. Fritz Grupe Email: fritz@unr.edu , or admin@mymajors.com 775-813-7407. Made Possible Through Funding From. Show Me The Money!!!. Research Opportunities Reserved for Small Business. Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR)
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NEVADA A Quick Overview of SBIR/STTR Dr. Fritz Grupe Email: fritz@unr.edu, or admin@mymajors.com 775-813-7407 Made Possible Through Funding From
Research Opportunities Reserved for Small Business • Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Set-aside for small businesses to engage in federal R&D -- with potential for commercialization. • Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Set-aside to facilitate cooperative R&D between small business concerns and U.S. research institutions -- with potential for commercialization. 2.5% 0.30%
SBIR Program Eligibility • Organized for- profit U.S. business • At least 51% U.S.- owned by individuals and independently operated • Small business located in the U.S. • 500 or fewer employees • P.I.’s primary employment with small businessduring project
STTR Program Eligibility • Applicantis a small business • Formal cooperative R&D effort • Minimum 40% by small business • Minimum 30% by U.S. research institution • U.S. research institution • College or university; other non-profit research organization; Federal R&D center • Intellectual property agreement • Allocation of rights in IP and rights to carry out follow-on R&D and commercialization
SBIR/STTR: Critical Differences • Research Partner SBIR:Permits research institution partners [Outsource ~ 33% Phase I and 50% Phase II R&D] STTR:Requiresresearch institution partners (e.g., universities) [40% small business concerns (for-profit) and 30% U.S. research institution (non-profit)] Award Is Always Made To Small Business
SBIR/STTR: Critical Differences • Principal Investigator SBIR: Primary (>50%) employment must be with small business STTR: Primary employment not stipulated [PI can be from research institution and/or from small business concern*] *DISCUSS WITH AGENCIES
What is Funded Under SBIR/STTR? • Innovation through the use of emerging technologies • Novel application of existing technologies – a new area of application • New capabilities or major improvements to existing technologies in efficiency, effectiveness, simplicity, …
Advantages of SBIR/STTR Programs • A specific “shopping list” for small firms describing what the government agencies need/fund • Significant amounts of R&D money reserved for small, innovative firms • Funding for early-stage feasibility and prototype studies--the type of R&D for which private firms and financing groups won’t provide investment • Asimplified route to obtaining federal R&D funds • Does not penalize a firm for being small or isolated • Provides valuable credibility to winning companies • Efficient use of federal R&D funds
SBIR/STTR’s 3-Phases PHASE I • Feasibility study • $100K and 6-month (SBIR) or 12-month (STTR) Award PHASE II • Full research/R&D • $750K and 2-year Award (SBIR/STTR) PHASE III • Commercialization stage • Use of non-SBIR/STTR funds
Variations • Fast Track (Phase I and II combined) • Phase II B (NSF will match 1:1)
The SBIR/STTR Timeline • The SBIR/STTR Phase I/Phase II completion timeline is from 3 to 5 years (best case). • Can your company survive during this time? • Will the marketplace for your idea survive this timeline? • Who is your competition? How are they funded? Where will they be after 3 to 5 years? Proposal Phase I Phase II 1 2 3 4 Years Source: PCB, Inc.
Phase III Funders • Governmental agencies • Corporations • Venture capitalist firms/individual • Angel investors
Performance of Research Activities • All R&D must be performed in its entirety in the U.S. • Rare cases to conduct testing of specific patient populations outside of the U.S. • Travel to scientific meetings in foreign countries is allowable • Foreign consultants/collaborators are allowable, but must perform consulting in the U.S.
What Does SBIR Pay For? • Direct Costs • Including fringe benefits • Indirect Costs • Fee/Profit • Up to 7% of the total direct and F&A costs. • Must be requested in the proposal to be eligible. • Not all costs are allowable
TOTAL ~ $2.0 + B FY 2004 SBIR / STTR Participating Agencies • DOD SBIR/STTR • HHS SBIR/STTR • NASA SBIR/STTR • DOE SBIR/STTR • NSF SBIR/STTR • DHS SBIR (Dropping) • USDA SBIR • DOC SBIR • ED SBIR • EPA SBIR • DOT SBIR
Don’t Judge an Agency’s Interests by Its “Name ” FACT: Many research areas of interest span across agencies • Avoid inaccurate assumptionsabout agency research missions (e.g., DOT is interested in “safety” NOT “economy”) • Maximize opportunities for funding by submitting proposals to as many relevant agencies as possible • Identical research • Complementary research
Understand Each Agency’s Culture • What are its distinct missions and needs ? • Is the agency program budget – centralized or de-centralized ? • relationship to “topic authors”
Understand Each Agency’s Culture • What are the lines of communication? • when (when not) to call… • who to call… • why to call… • How does the review and award process operate? • Who are the reviewers – internal, external, or both ? • Who makes the final award selection ?
Understand Each Agency’s Culture • What are the types of awards (contract or grant) ? • Are there “funding gap” programs ? • Does the agency offer a “technical assistance” program ? • How can the agency support a firm’s “commercialization” program ? • as a Phase III “customer” • by providing external “contacts”
Contracting Agencies Agency establishes plans, protocols and requirements Highly focused topics More fiscal requirements Granting Agencies Investigator initiates an idea Less well-specified topics More flexibility Contracting vs. Granting Agencies DOD HHS/NIH NASA ED EPA DOT DOC HHS/NIH NSF ED USDA DOE
Grants vs. Contracts • Grants – You are selling your idea against other ideas • Contracts – You are selling your solution to their idea
Agency SBIR Differences • Number and Timing of Solicitations • R&D Topic Areas -- (Broad vs. Focused) • Dollar Amount of Award (Phase I and II) • Proposal Preparation Instructions • Financial details (e.g., Indirect Cost Rates, Gap Funding) • Receipt Dates • Proposal Review Process • Proposal Success Rates • Type of Award (Contract or Grant)
SBIR Success Ratios • Phase I • Historically, 1 out of 10 proposals are funded • Recently, 1 out of 7 proposals were funded • Last year, it was back to 1 out of 10 proposals funded • Phase II • Between 1 out of 2 to 1 out of 3 • Some Phase IIs become contracts (Phase III)
For more information….. • Contact individual agency websites • Cross-agency website: http://www.sbir.gov • Conferences / workshops • Topic search engine for all agencies • Partnering Opportunities • State Newsletters
Other Helpful Sites • www.sba.gov/sbir • www.zyn.com/sbir • www.pbcinc.com • http://www.cnytdo.org/files/SBIR_guide.pdf • (for a helpful manual that summarizes the contents of this workshop) • http://www.niaid.nih.gov/ncn/sbir/pres.htm
Firm Size Distribution* *FY01 Phase I DOD Award Winners Who Participates in SBIR? • Firms are typically small and new to the program. • About 1/3 are first-time Phase I awardees. • Small hi-tech firms from across the country.
Faculty Opportunities • Own small firms (assign someone else PI) • Principal investigator (with official permission from university) • Senior personnel on SBIR/STTR • Consultants on SBIR/STTR • Subcontracts on SBIR/STTR • University facilities provide analytical and other service support
Getting Help With STTR 1. Federal Laboratory Consortium http://www.federallabs.org/ See Technology Locator 2. University technology transfer officer (if there is one) 3. Techmatch http://www.dodtechmatch.com/DOD/index.aspx
Current Issues • Reauthorization • Majority venture capital group ownership and control • Raising award amounts • Changing the set aside % and linkage from extramural to the full R&D budget • Lowering the $100m participation threshold to include smaller agencies • Providing agencies with administrative funds out of the SBIR pool • Increasing the percentage (ratio of work) allowed to subcontractors/universities
Commercialization assistance programs out of the SBIR pool (awardee's $$$) • Federal and State Technology Partnership (FAST) outreach to new entities • Rural Outreach Program (ROP) • SBIR Mentor/Protégé program • STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) incentives • Energy Focus Area (similar in construction to the manufacturing clause)
Some Problems and Issues • Intellectual property • Time and effort to write, wait for, account for a grant • Distractions • Do you have enough horses to do the job? • Partners? • Equipment • Funding gaps • Funding is specific
SBIR National Conferences April 21 -23, 2010 Hartford, Connecticut
Top 6 Reasons to Seek SBIR / STTR Funding Opportunities 1. Over $2.3 Billion available 2.NOT A LOAN - no repayment 3. Provides recognition, verification and visibility 4. Fosterspartnerships (e.g., large corporations, academia)
Top 6 Reasons to Seek SBIR / STTR Funding Opportunities 5. Provides seed money to fund high risk projects 6.Intellectual property rights are normally retained by the business
Award Process Congratulations!The check is “in the mail…” (almost)