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Inversion of economy has taken place over the last 30 years. We are now in the knowledge economy shifting from a manufacturing economy. More than 80% of a company's valuation is intangible according to a study done by Ocean Tomo. University technology transfer is a difficult business with very few homeruns, taking a long time to get to market.
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INNOVATION PARTNERSHIP: UNIVERSITY BASED TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
Dipanjan (DJ) Nag, Ph.D., MBA, CLP, RTTP
Product & Business Development Advisor,
Patent Properties
Professor of Practice, Business and Science, Rutgers University
Visiting Professor, Shizuoka University
1
VALUE OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Components of S&P 500 Market Value
Data: Ned Davis Research, Inc.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Uzmg2bEgv8&feature=player_embedded
Components of S&P 500 Market Value
Intellectual Property
Leading Asset Class
Components of S&P 500® Market Capitalization
-
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
1973 1975 1977 1979 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005
S&P 5
00 M
arke
t Cap
($
'000
s) Market Premium
Intangible Book Value
Tangible Book Value
Data: Ned Davis Research, Inc.
THE WORLD IS SPIKY: POPULATION
Map by Tim Gulden, University of Maryland.From Richard Florida, “The World is Spiky,”The Atlantic Monthly, October 2005
THE WORLD IS SPIKY: PATENTS
Map by Tim Gulden, University of Maryland.From Richard Florida, “The World is Spiky,”The Atlantic Monthly, October 2005
UNIVERSITY TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
TECHNOLOGY COMMERCIALIZATION IN NUMBERS*
9
Research Funding
(~$693B)
~293,000 Invention
Disclosures
~152,000 Patent
Applications
~61,200 Patents Awarded
67,102 activelicense & options,7,781 start-ups
* Source AUTM Licensing Survey 1991-2011
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BAYH-DOLE ACT Historical Perspective• Science — The endless frontier (1945) • 1950s-1970s — Expansion of government R&D
– growth in R&D procurement from universities– competition for government research grants
• By late 1970s, recognition of unrealized potential from Government inventions– 28,000 government patents but only 5% licensed
• No uniformity in government intellectual property policies in R&D procurement