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MCNC-RDI and Grant Proposals. April 13, 2004. MCNC: Local resource, statewide impact. Established in 1980 as Microelectronics Center of North Carolina Founded by NC General Assembly as non-profit, state-funded resource Expanded in 1985 to include NC Networking & Supercomputing
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MCNC-RDI and Grant Proposals April 13, 2004
MCNC: Local resource, statewide impact • Established in 1980 as Microelectronics Center of North Carolina • Founded by NC General Assembly as non-profit, state-funded resource • Expanded in 1985 to include NC Networking & Supercomputing • Provide high-speed network linking NC universities • Provide common platform for statewide research for academic institutions • Achieved in 1999 self-funded, private, non-profit research entity • Split company in 2003 into: • MCNC Research & Development Institute • MCNC Grid Computing & Networking Services • MCNC Ventures
Novel Sensors and Actuators Biomedical / Environmental Materials & Electronics Organic, Macro, and Opto electronics Display Technologies 3D Integration and Advanced Electronic Packaging Signal Electronics Network Security Optical Networks Networked Information Systems Services: Prototype Development Foundry Services, Analytical Services Test Bed Services MCNC-RDI Technology Focus Areas
MCNC-RDI’s prototyping and R&D capabilities support biotechnology initiatives • Focus on Biomedical Materials & Electronics • Bio/Chemical Sensors • Implantable Devices • Biomedical Diagnostics
MCNC-GCNS leads the grid computing initiatives in research and education in NC Involved with research and development to enable next generation grids. Actively participates in standards process MCNC-RDI Statewide grid makes compute, storage, and data resources available to various applications and users MCNC’s North Carolina Grid Supports development, testing, and integration of grid technologies and novel applications The Grid Technology and Evaluation Center (GTEC) • - Cluster and high performance computing • - Middleware services • - Storage • - Information security • - Advanced networking Expert Grid researchers and consultants Services offered on an a la carte and bundled basis Pay for what you use, saving the need to make large capital and resource investments
MCNC Venture funds overview • $25 million of capital for early stage investing • Focus on the electronic, photonic and informational technology industries, as commensurate with the core technology capabilities of MCNC-RDI • Focus on companies and VC’s located in North Carolina • Leveraging MCNC-RDI’s knowledge and facilities • Pursuit of close partnerships with the state’s VC community as well as the technology transfer offices of the area’s universities
MCNC-RDI History of Awards and Grants • MCNC has a 20-year history of identifying, pursuing, and winning federal grants and earmarks • Granting bodies include • DOD - DARPA, ARO, ARL, NRO, NRL, AFRL • NASA • NIST • NIH • USPTO • NASA • DOL, DOE • Success rates are strong but variable • Depending on program, program manager, technology, timing, skill, and a little luck
General Grant Information • 900+ grant programs being offered by the Federal government • 26 Federal grant-making agencies • Over $350 billion annually awarded to state and local governments, academia, not-for-profits and other organizations • Projects, dollar amount, and grant length can vary by agency • List of NIH codes can be found at http://grants2.nih.gov/grants/funding/ac.pdf
BAA – Broad Agency Announcements Provides general description of a program, identifies broad evaluation criteria, and solicits proposals for participation SSA – Sources-Sought Announcements SRA – Special Research Announcements SSA and SRA provide advance notice of DoD interest in a particular area of technology Also serve so DoD may develop competition within a technology area what is the market for potential qualified offerors BRP - Bioengineering Research Partnerships BRG – Bioengineering Research Grants EBRG – Exploratory BRGs PA - Program Announcement Increased priority and/or emphasizes particular funding mechanisms for a specific area of science; applications accepted on standard receipt dates on an on-going basis PAR: a PA for which special referral guidelines apply, as described in the PAR. PAS: a PA that includes specific set-aside funds, as described in the PAS. RFA - Request for Applications: identifies a more narrowly defined area for which one or more NIH institutes have set aside funds for awarding grants; one receipt date. RFP – Request for Proposals solicits proposals for a contract; one receipt date Government Acronyms for potential grants
R01 (NIH) – Large research grants • R-series grants are single research project grants • For a project performed by one or more named investigator(s) in an area of specific interest and competence • Often awarded to a consortium • 3 Deadlines each year for new R01 applications: • February 1, June 1, and October 1 • These deadlines also apply to most other awards young scientists are likely to apply for, including research career awards, research center awards, and research program awards • Note: Competing continuations, supplemental grants, and revised applications are due exactly 1 month later • March 1, July 1, and November 1
R21 (NIH) - Early stage development support • Intended to encourage new, exploratory and developmental research projects • Assess the feasibility of a novel area of investigation or a new experimental system • Considerable risk but may lead to a breakthrough in a particular area, or to the development of novel techniques, agents, methodologies, models or applications • Seeking a major impact on a field of biomedical, behavioral, or clinical research • Details • Modular Format • Up to 2 years and $275,000 in direct costs • Normally, no more than $200,000 may be requested in any year • New projects only; competing continuation applications will not be accepted
R03 (NIH) - Projects limited by cost or scope • Using widely accepted approaches and methods • Examples of projects include the following: • Pilot or feasibility studies • Secondary analysis of existing data • Small, self-contained research projects • Development of research methodology • Development of new research technology • Details • Up to 2 years • Direct costs up to two $25,000 modules or $50,000 per year • New projects only; competing continuation applications will not be accepted. • May not be used for thesis or dissertation research • Only one revision of a previously reviewed small grant application may be submitted
Turnaround time for Grant notification • First notification: 4-6 months • Funding Decision: 6-9 months • Example: NIH R01 • Submitted late August 2003 • Peer review scored in March 2004 • Funding decision May 2004 • SBIR/STTR – similar timeframe • However, the investment of time and money is a long-term benefit • Credibility • IP advancement • Partnership opportunities
Use a targeted approach to select appropriate grants • Technology (align with your core competencies) • Homework (research) • Federal budget • FedBizOpps • Grants.gov • Science and Technology grants overview can be found at http://www.grants.gov/ScienceTechnology • Contacts • Counselors and consultants • SBTDC
Grants.gov: The 2+ year old “overnight success” • One of the 24 Federal cross-agency E-Government initiatives focused on improving access to services via the Internet • The vision is to produce a simple, unified “storefront” to electronically find, apply for, and manage grant opportunities • Simplify the grant application process and reduce paperwork • Recent Key Milestones on Grants.gov: • 9/18/2003 - “Find Grant Opportunities” Feature Now Available • 10/20/2003 – Users may register for credentials • 10/31/2003 – “Apply for Grants” feature launched; Grants.gov fully integrated with the government-wide E-Authentication Gateway • 11/7/2003 - Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has ordered all federal agencies to post grant announcements by this date
Hints about “FedBizOpps” All solicitations for potential DoD contract awards larger than $25,000 must be advertised through www.fedbizopps.gov • For larger grants, FedBizOpps can be a formality • Largest proposals are usually procurement-related • Several strong candidates likely • Pre-selection processes include • Whitepapers • Outline submissions
Uncovering potential opportunities • Network, network, network • Collaborate with other groups • Ask your service providers and current partners for leads • Pursue opportunities for 1:1s with program managers • Industry Days • Don’t be afraid to call and clarify opportunities
Uncovering potential opportunities • Work with non-profits and economic development organizations • MCNC • NCEITA • SBTDC • NC Biotech Center • Coordinate with your congressman • Make him/her aware of your capabilities • Probably a more indirect rather than a direct reference; don’t expect too much • Last but not least – • Network, network, network (again)
Senator Elizabeth Dole Senator John Edwards Congressman David Price Congressman Mike McIntyre Congressman Brad Miller Congressman Richard Burr Congressman Bob Etheridge Senate Armed Services committee NC State Representation on Federal Committees • Intelligence committee • Appropriations • House Armed Services committee • Committee on Science • Committee on Energy and Commerce (Vice-Chair) • Select Committee on Intelligence • Select Committee on Homeland Security Current as of March, 2004
Tips for successful grant applications • Follow all the details and formalities • Some agencies (e.g. DHS, TSWG) are very competitive - very low percentage of applications funded • The more competitive the proposal, the more detail required • If you don’t succeed, ask for feedback from the program director • If you do succeed, remember input for next time • Re-submit • If you have the time and have a strong score
Joint Opportunities for Entrepreneurial Companies and MCNC-RDI • Consortium development • Partnership on federal grant or funding opportunities • Joint component design and development for new or existing products • Technology licensing to boost product development and IP platform • Fabrication and analytical testing of engineered components
How do I pursue these great opportunities? MCNC brings companies both skilled researchers and in-depth development capabilities in multiple technologies • Develop your own list of possible grants • Create a team or consortium • MCNC can participate as a subcontractor on SBIR grants • Contact us as a potential partner
World class research team • 20-year proven track record in government contract research • Unique capabilities and infrastructure • Technical depth, stable staff • Extensive facilities and resources focused on helping North Carolina
MCNC-RDI Contact Information Erika Hanley-Onken Business Development Manager (919) 248-9247 eonken@mcnc.org www.mcnc.org/rdi Barbara Capone Director, Marketing Programs (919) 248-4148 bcapone@mcnc.org