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December 10, 2018
Frederick National Laboratory, Frederick Innovative Technology Center Announce New Accelerator Program for Frederick Startups
FREDERICK, Md. -- Creating a successful business takes
more than a clever idea. It requires a strong team and access to funders,
critical connections, guidance, and coaching. A new program launched by
Frederick Innovative Technology Center, Inc. (FITCI) in collaboration with the
Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research and numerous community
partners is aimed at increasing access to these resources for local
entrepreneurs.
The new Community Growth Accelerator Technology
Development Program has the goal of driving start-up formation, development,
and expansion in Frederick County. Entrepreneurs involved in the program will receive
access to weekly in-person classes, mentorship from business leaders throughout
the community, focus groups, and an online portal with additional educational
resources.
The classes, led by local business leaders and university
instructors, will cover important business skills, including pitching, creating
a solid business model, understanding customer segmentation, and go-to-market
strategy. The young companies will be given the opportunity to practice their
pitches each week, and the program will culminate in a pitch competition in
front of venture capitalists and investors. The winner will go on to represent
Frederick in the global Startup of the Year Contest.
In addition to Frederick National Laboratory and FITCI,
Frederick Chamber of Commerce, Hood College, the Frederick County Office of
Economic Development, and the City of Frederick Department of Economic
Development are also signatories on the memorandum of understanding (MOU) as
the founding partners forming the Community Growth Accelerator—but many more
community partners are involved in the effort. A grant from the Rural Maryland
Council provided funding for the Accelerator.
“The group signing the MOU is the founding partners,”
explained Kathie Callahan Brady, FITCI’s CEO. “But the Accelerator is involving
the entire community. There are too many partners to name. That’s what makes it
special and unique. And the community is really important, because
entrepreneurs need connections more than they need anything else.”
The community partners will each leverage their resources
and expertise to support the participating teams and young companies. The
Frederick National Laboratory, together with National Cancer Institute (NCI),
will provide entrepreneurs looking to form a biotech startup with assistance in
licensing and partnering around promising technologies developed by their
researchers. Technologies will be available to startup companies through
programs such as NCI’s Start-Up 2.0 that offer advantageous licensing terms.
“The biomedical technology portfolio in Frederick is
impressive,” said Vladimir Popov, Ph.D., Business Development Manager at the
Frederick National Laboratory and a mentor at FITCI. “It will be very exciting
to see some of these technologies being further developed and driven to market
by young entrepreneurs.”
Although FITCI focuses primarily on technology and
biotechnology companies, the Accelerator is open to any startup company or
entrepreneur.
“It’s for people who want to grow a scalable business,
and for people who have never started a business but have an idea… or don’t
have an idea at all,” Callahan Brady said.
“Programs like these not only provide guidance and
education to existing startups, but also promote formation of new companies.
There is a strong initiative among federally funded labs to license, further
develop, and ultimately commercialize certain technologies from their IP
portfolios. Licensing to startup companies is definitely one way to go about
this, ” Popov explained.
Hopeful
entrepreneurs looking for an idea can find one at the pre-accelerator events
slated for January 21 (Open House) and March 9 (Hackathon). The Open House will
host the Frederick National Laboratory and National Cancer Institute, along
with other founders and organizations, who will be pitching their technologies
available for licensing. Hackathon will be welcoming individuals who wish to
get to know more about developing their ideas and will be healthcare themed. These
informative and match-making sessions will not only be tailored toward those
looking for initial ideas, inspiration, and guidance, but also for those with
formed business ideas and entrepreneurship enthusiasts who would like to become
a part of a startup team. More detailed information about the Hackathon
and the Open House will be published closer to the event dates.
The first Accelerator cohort,
which will consist of approximately 10 companies, will be announced at FITCI’s 15th Anniversary in
May, and the 12-week program will begin in June and hold its final pitch
session in September.
The new program also aims to keep promising companies and
ideas in Frederick and will give the companies a chance to grow while staying
local.
“We are looking for businesses that will plant themselves
in the local community and create new jobs,” Callahan Brady added.
For more information about the upcoming program, contact
Ivana Shuck, FITCI Community Manager, at [email protected], 301-694-2999.