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Searching for the next Google

2011-10-18 11:10:53

By Kate Dailey BBC News Magazine

Analysts suggest supporting innovative start-up companies to increase hiring.

For the second part in a series on job creation in the US, a look at incubators

designed to turn great ideas into huge corporations.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Entrepreneurship Center is located

equidistant from the university's business school, its media and architecture

school and engineering wing, in an area managing director Bill Aulet calls the

"demilitarised zone."

"The geeks can come over and the suits can come over and they can all work

together to build a company," says Mr Aulet.

Inside, it has everything a young entrepreneur might need to start a business:

soundproof phone booths for private calls with investors.

Cozy cubicles with whiteboard walls for meetings with business partners.

And boxes of boxes of Ramen noodles for strivers who can't spare the cash or

the time for a proper meal.

In one room, MBA student Birju Shah is hunched over a laptop.

He is the founder of MDBug, a medical transcription and electronic medical

records company, and Sugar Crew, a social networking site for people with

diabetes.

Next door, three 20-something men in jeans and T-shirts write formulas on the

wall.

They run Ubiquitous Energy, a company that has developed a way to make light,

flexible solar cells that can conform to almost any material.

Embracing innovation

Outside the building, an entrepreneurial "walk of fame" salutes giants like

Thomas Edison, Steve Jobs, William Hewlett and David Packard, as well as MIT

alumni Mitch Kapur, founder of Lotus Software, and Robert Swanson, founder of

Genentech.

Thinking outside of the box

The innovative approach of FastCap Systems, a company started with help from

the MIT Entrepreneurship Center, has the company feeling good about their

future. The BBC visited the Boston, MA offices for their optimistic take on

employment.

Founded in 2008, they make lighter, more fuel-efficient batteries for hybrid

cars and industrial use. The goal, says FastCap founder and CEO Riccardo

Signorelli, is to dramatically reduce the cost of hybrid cars, making them

accessible to more consumers. The early success of their company has them

looking to expand.

The implication is that the students working from dawn to dusk inside the

centre aren't that different from the industry titans memorialised outside, and

that they too could go on to create some of the most successful companies in

the world.

In a time when unemployment hovers at 9.1% - with unofficial estimates coming

in at much higher - most new companies created are those that only employ one

person: so called "jobless entrepreneurship".

But those companies supported by the Entrepreneurship Center have the potential

to help usher in a new era of job growth and economic stimulation.

In a report published last week by the presidential jobs council, "nurture the

high-growth enterprises that create new jobs" was listed as one of five

common-sense solutions to help reduce unemployment.

"If the United States is going to grow its labour force and sustain that growth

over the long term, government must foster an environment in which

entrepreneurs can create high-growth companies that succeed in a global

economy," the report says.

That work is already being done at MIT and other university-backed programmes

that seek to turn the intellectual capital produced on campus into successful

companies.

America's schools pump out some of the best-trained, most motivated students,

with the potential to make huge advancements in biotech, information systems,

engineering, energy, and medicine.

Start Quote

Starbucks frowns on doing biological experiments on their tables

Douglas Crawford Associate director, QB3

But current fiscal conditions make it difficult for those types of projects to

launch. Unlike smaller ventures, such as starting a law firm or a cleaning

company, nascent innovation-based businesses need a large influx of cash for

research and development and can take years to develop and bring their product

to the market.

"Those are capital-intense markets, with all the capital still sitting in the

sidelines," says Thom Ruhe, director of entrepreneurship at the Kauffman

Foundation.

"Banks are flush with cash and they're not lending it. Investors and hedges are

flush with cash, and they're not investing like they used to," he says.

"It's been this way for a couple years, and nothing we're looking into shows

that's going to change anytime soon."

Building global brands

Incubators like the MIT Entrepreneurship Center help in multiple ways - cutting

down on overheads by providing meeting space and infrastructure support like

wifi and computers, and helping to connect worthy projects with interested

investors.

"This centre is absolutely central to the success of our operation," says

Ubiquitous Energy co-founder Erdin Beshimov.

'We want to build a fantastically successful company that's a great place to

work for, that has a global brand and a tremendous social impact world wide,"

says Mr Beshimov. "It's a good goal, but it's not an easily achievable goal."

How to foster innovation

Suggestions from the presidential jobs council include:

Reform immigration policies to attract and keep highly skilled entrepreneurs

Produce financial incentives for firms to go public

Incentivise investments in start-ups

Increase patent office staff to keep up with demand

Shorten patent application process

Reduce student loan burdens for young business founders

Support mentorship programmes

Source: Taking Action, Building Confidence: a report from the president's job

council

For companies that dream big, institutional support is critical.

Having a fabulous technical mind or an amazing biotech product doesn't mean

much without the ability to navigate loans, patents, and investor relations.

And unlike other small businesses, highly innovative companies can't often get

started in an empty garage or rented office space.

"You can't create a biotech startup at a Starbucks table with a notebook," says

Douglas Crawford, associate director of the California Institute for

Quantitative Biomedical Research (QB3), an entrepreneurial support programme at

the University of California.

"Starbucks frowns on doing biological experiments on their tables."

Founded in 2000 and active for about six years, the state-supported programme

hopes to turn technology created at the University of California into companies

that can create jobs for the rest of the state.

"We have a mandate to support the sort of science that can lay the foundation

for whole new industries, then ensure that the fruit of that work gets to

market as quickly as possible," says Mr Crawford.

That includes renting single benches in hi-tech labs at a price that "even a

grad student could finance on a credit card", he says.

Mixed results

Four of the six companies that originally rented lab space in that lab received

venture capital funding, while another was purchased by a larger company for

$50m ( 32m).

But not all companies started through these incubators will succeed, and even

those that do won't restore America to its industrial glory days.

Ubiquitous Energy's Mr Beshimov says that his company's main staffing needs

will be engineers with advanced degrees.

Though Mr Crawford notes that many of the biotech manufacturing jobs can be

done by employees without advanced degrees and trained on the job, the output

is small.

The 45 companies successfully aided by QB3 currently boast about 180 employees

- impressive by biotech standards, but barely a dent in California's 12.1%

unemployment rate.

On the other hand, HubSpot - a marketing software company founded in 2006 by

MIT's current entrepreneur-in-residence - has over 300 employees, and is hiring

across several departments.

Supporting innovation can't be done in academic settings alone.

Government funding, immigration reform, and corporate co-operation are just

some of the things needed to help foster new companies that will create new

jobs.

But for the young entrepreneurs currently at work, there's no time to wait.

Their big idea might just be the next big success.