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Life Science Start-Ups
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Introduction

Since the dot com bubble burst in 2000, followed by a slow recovery in Biotech investments after 2002 the profile for investing in and therefore presentation of new propositions for life science enterprises has shifted dramatically. Low risk development plans with broad IP platform bases, multiple product or service generation capability and an established experienced management have become essential components of any young aspiring Genentech wannabe.

Then there is the problem of traversing the funding gap from POC/Seed funding to Series A. Combine this with the current credit crunch, it may not be the time to think of spinning out technology in to an independent legal entity.

However we believe that in the life sciences/healthcare sector for a sound proposition with a large target market in excess of £500m, with a rounded management team and a strong and broad intellectual property position, the situation is no worse than it was a year ago. The start-up route is still the most tractable step to ensuring that high net worth technologies, requiring substantial proof of concept programmes reach the market.

Although the commitment to time and drive required by technology transfer officers, inventors, and other founders is immense, two or three such projects should always be on the go at any averagely sized TTO. The financial rewards can be huge but more often the wider socio-economic and public relations benefits to the University/Institute are far greater.

Because investment windows and favoured technologies are fluid and because the lead in time to organising a decently prepared and robustly organised proposition is long, it pays to have several such opportunities mature enough to latch on to investor enthusiasm when it is there for the technology space that you are in.

Currently investors are receptive to medical device based opportunities, clinical programmes with drug class repurposing platforms and new high value diagnostics (including biomarker based platforms with exemplar disease signatures). The caveat is that all these need substantial clinical proof of concept to attract an investor at a reasonable price.

Simon Youlton has a track record in early life science ventures that includes being a Director on a management buy-out team of a life science co; advising on strategic and operational plans for a number of academic spin out ventures including:

He has experience at Board level serving on the Boards of spin out ventures (Spear, PETRRA) and working with bus dev teams from a number of successful CRUK spin outs including KuDOS and Antisoma amongst others.