Summary
The proposed DE iRED program consists of university and private sector partnerships to deliver a
comprehensive program that will engage and support biomedical innovators in the early stages of technology
commercialization by addressing key bottlenecks in the startup process as identified both in the solicitation and
by the DRIVEN Accelerator Hub. According to DRIVEN’s Voice of Customer interviews regarding challenges to
the commercialization of biomedical innovations, there are 3 main barriers to translating basic science products
that benefit patients, 1) gap in funding between basic research and validation studies required for early-stage
development, 2) lack of knowledge and understanding by innovators about how technologies are brought to
market, and 3) lack of access to sufficient technology development and commercialization resources. The
creation of the IDeA state program is clear evidence of the need for resources not only to cultivate biomedical
research but to spur on commercialization of the new technology created. Correctly identifying deficiencies in
the commercialization pathway and preemptively providing corrective measures will create better entrepreneurs
and increase the likelihood of commercialization. Our team will develop a rigorous and engaging online
curriculum to support the goals and bridge the gap of sufficient training and knowledge for innovators through a
high-availability, scalable, on-demand platform. The platform will help both new and experienced innovators to
focus on areas of need and provide direct learning interventions from ideation, to market assessment, and go-
to-market strategies and will allow for live mentoring and coaching interactions online to support and supplement
the curriculum. Data and advanced insights will be analyzed for both the overall program and the learning
process that will yield trends as to the correlation between innovators who are deemed successful and the parts
of the program leveraged most, allowing us to continuously improve the program. This will result in a more robust
education, an increase in the number of biomedical entrepreneurs, an increase in the number of biomedical
startups developing market-driven technologies applying for SBIR/STTR and accessing existing ecosystem
resources, and increased connectivity between innovative technologies and other enterprises and experts.
The specific aims align participants and establish the DE iRED organization with deliverables that include
team governance criteria and processes, and innovator roadmaps for Delaware, Northeast, and wider
region/IDeA states.They also include the launch of final program and outreach campaigns (local > northeast)
and programming using data obtained through pilot activities, testing the revenue model and pricing for
sustainability as well as increased reach of the launch outreach campaign to the Northeast and national venue.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
The DE iRED team will develop a rigorous and engaging online curriculum to support the goals and bridge the
gap of sufficient training and knowledge for innovators through a high-availability, scalable, on-demand platform.
This will result in better education and increase the number of biomedical entrepreneurs, increase the number
of biomedical startups developing market-driven technologies applying for SBIR/STTR and accessing existing
ecosystem resources. The end result will provide increased knowledge, more high-tech small business startups
and advances in commercialization of the developed medical products.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AddressAreaAwardBasic ScienceBiological ModelsBiomedical ResearchBiotechnologyBusinessesCessation of lifeChemistryCritical PathwaysDataDelawareDevelopmentDisclosureEcosystemEducationEducational CurriculumEngineeringEnsureEntrepreneurshipEvaluationExposure toFailureFundingGoalsInstitutionInterventionInterviewKnowledgeLearningLegal patentLicensingMarketingMeasuresMedicalMedical TechnologyMentorsMethodologyModelingMonitorNational Institute of General Medical SciencesParticipantPathway interactionsPatientsPerformancePharmacologic SubstancePhasePhase TransitionPricePrivate SectorProcessProgram EvaluationReadinessRequest for ProposalsResourcesScienceSmall Business Innovation Research GrantSmall Business Technology Transfer ResearchTechnologyTechnology TransferTestingTrainingTranslatingUniversitiesVoiceWorkcohortcommercializationexperienceideationimprovedinnovationinnovative technologiesinsightinventionnew technologyonline courseoutreachproduct developmentprogramsprototyperesearch studysuccesstechnology developmenttrendvalidation studies
No Sub Projects information available for 4UT2GM151890-02
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
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Patents
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Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
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Clinical Studies
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News and More
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