Daily Camera (Boulder)

CU BOULDER Venture Partners launches new startup creator

- By Bizwest bizwest@medianewsg­roup.com

BOULDER >> Hoping to lure entreprene­urs ready to launch startups based on innovation­s created in research labs at the University of Colorado Boulder.

The Embark Deep Tech Startup Creator has been created by Venture Partners at CU Boulder, the commercial­ization arm of CU, to match business minds outside the university with breakthrou­gh inventions created within its walls — and provide those ventures with funding.

Each year, roughly 150 inventions emerge from CU Boulder’s research labs. Some are spun out and brought to market by the innovators themselves, while many more join an underutili­zed pool of university innovation­s. At the same time, many entreprene­urs are searching for the newest technologi­es to bring to the marketplac­e but lack the needed access and support.

In response, Venture Partners created Embark to bring together those would-be entreprene­urs and inventors in a unique way, said Brynmor Rees, associate vice chancellor for research and innovation and managing director of Venture Partners.

“Just because the university inventors didn’t create a startup company doesn’t mean the technology is not a really exciting startup opportunit­y,” he said. “We think some of our very best innovation­s are available, and Embark is a way to catalyze that.”

To that end, Venture Partners has curated a list of 50 promising innovation­s with strong commercial potential from a broad array of scientific and engineerin­g discipline­s.

“The exciting element is that Embark brings to the table technologi­es from a variety of sectors. They’re not all in one bucket,” said Stephen Miller, director of venture developmen­t at Venture Partners. “No matter what sector you’re interested in, we’ve got a technology that has high potential that really needs a hard-driving innovator to move it forward.”

For example, Embark technologi­es include a health diagnostic invented through a collaborat­ion facilitate­d by JILA — founded in 1962 at CU as the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysi­cs — between the labs of National Institute of Standards and Technology fellows Jun Ye and David Nesbitt.

By using quantum science and combining a special laser and a mirrored cavity, that team can precisely measure human breath with unpreceden­ted sensitivit­y. That technology could be used to diagnose health conditions such as asthma, diabetes and COVID-19 in a simple, non-intrusive way.

Embark presents a new avenue for ideas such as the breath monitor to get out into the world where they can make a difference, according to Marta Zgagacz, director of licensing at Venture Partners. CU researcher­s, she said, “are extremely enthusiast­ic to have their technology go through the Embark program and hopefully come out the other side with a startup.”

Entreprene­urs can learn about Embark technologi­es and apply to the program through Venture Partners. Successful applicants will then have several weeks to dive deeper into the technologi­es, learn about the startup resources available through the university, and meet with the inventors, who can play an important role in the startup if they choose.

Entreprene­urs will then present their commercial­ization plans, and Venture Partners will select those who qualify for an exclusive partnershi­p with the university for the chosen technology. Additional­ly, several successful applicants will be offered funding in the form of a sixmonth part-time salary as the founding CEOS and up to $100,000 for technology developmen­t.

Embark’s new funding stream, made possible by grants from CU Boulder and the Colorado Office of Economic Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Trade, is also intended to open new doors to underrepre­sented groups in the startup community.

“As much as we’re interested in experience­d, successful startup founders, we also want applicatio­ns from folks who are earlier in their career or who otherwise wouldn’t be able to start a venture such as this without the salary support,” Rees said. “We hope that the funding will diversify our startup founders at the university.”

Embark joins a suite of support that Venture Partners already offers to inventors and entreprene­urs wanting to bring their innovation­s to market. That support includes I-corpstm, Destinatio­n Startup, Ascent Deep Tech Accelerato­r, Lab Venture Challenge and a partnershi­p with the Buff Venture Fund.

This article was first published by Bizwest, an independen­t news organizati­on, and is published under a license agreement. © 2023 Bizwest Media LLC. You can view the original here: Venture Partners launches new startup creator at CU

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