To accelerate the translation of scientific and technological innovations into practical clinical use, ITHS Technology Development Center (TDC) is developing the year-long Translational Science Entrepreneurship Program (TSEP) based on content from prior entrepreneurship workshops and year-long business courses taught by TDC staff. This leadership program will prepare a researcher for the founding and leadership of a startup company.
This program is open to all health science, life science, bioscience, agricultural science, medical technology, digital health, and public health post-doctoral scientists, PhD graduate students, and inspired faculty members from Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, Idaho, and Oregon academic and clinical entities, as well as CTSAs across the nation. The program will require each participant to bring their own project that they sincerely intend to translate into a product and company. The program is not just for people working in a lab.
We welcome people developing therapeutics, devices, and diagnostics as well as digital health, mental health, public health, and agriculture innovation applications and tools.
Participants will be expected to do assigned pre-work (article reading, video watching, podcast listening) prior to each session.
Sessions will be live and presented in hybrid format with some participants in the classroom and others joining remotely via zoom to enable geographically broad real-time participation.
Sessions will be 2 hours. The session topic will be elucidated in a 15-20 minute presentation that will be recorded, followed by 20-30 minutes of Q&A.
In the second hour, participants will be introduced to and get started working on the next commercialization activity so they can complete it prior to the next session. Ad hoc virtual “office hours” will be offered to assist participants as needed between sessions.
Recordings of topic presentations will be made available to the public. Discussion of participant projects will not be recorded. To protect project confidentiality, participants will be instructed not to discuss scientific and technological details of their projects. These details are not needed to work through the strategic problems. Working sessions will not be recorded.
Sessions will be hosted biweekly over the summer and monthly during the academic year.
Applicants will be asked to provide the following:
Applications are closed for the 2024–2025 program. We will begin accepting applications for the 2025–2026 program in mid-February.
Free of charge to all participants. This program neither receives fees from nor provides funding to participants. Initial experiences with this inaugural program will support future application for R25 Research Education grant funding.
Speaker: Bill Mahoney, PhD
Vice Chair of the National Postdoctoral Association and Associate Dean for Student and Postdoctoral Affairs at UW, Director, Molecular Medicine and Mechanisms of Disease, Associate Professor of Pathology
HOMEWORK: Self-assessment survey for accountability group formation and mentor matching
READING for next session: “Knowing Yourself” by Warren Bennis (18pp PDF, sent by email); “How to Become a Better Leader” by Ginka Toegel and Jean-Louis Barsoux (12pp PDF, sent by email)
Speaker: Ken Myer
Interim Executive, Leadership Advisor and Lecturer, Commercialization Advisor
ACTIVITY: Accountability group match announcements, giving time to groups to setup regular meetings
HOMEWORK: Complete confidentiality agreement
SUGGESTED OPTIONAL READING: Journey to the Emerald City by Roger Connors and Tom Smith (ISBN 9780735203587)
Speaker: Teddy Johnson
ITHS Director of Technology Developement
Effectively sharing ideas and working with people of differing expertise
ACTIVITY: Identifying people you can efficiently work with by itemizing your normal and preferred communication and work-styles
ACTIVITY: Mapping the skillsets you need to add to your team now, in 6 months, next year
Speakers: Terri Butler, PhD
Manager, ITHS Drug and Device Advisory Committee; Associate Director of Outreach, Partnerships and Biomedical Entrepreneurship Training, ITHS
Margaret Rosenfeld, MD, MPH
Professor and Associate Vice-Chair for Clinical Research, Department of Pediatrics and Center for Respiratory Biology and Therapeutics at Seattle Children’s Hospital
Considering market needs, personal interests, and health equity in your search for the optimal customer
ACTIVITY: Creating lists of people (with contact information) for customer discovery interviews
HOMEWORK: Conduct customer discovery interviews
SUGGESTED OPTIONAL READING: The Lean Startup by Eric Ries (ISBN 9780307887894)
Speaker: Maren Nelson
Quality Management System Consultant; Alliance of Angels Life Sciences Screening Committee Co-Chair; Chief Operating Officer of Glidance, Inc.
Proving the patients need and the market will pay for your product
Speaker: Teddy Johnson
ITHS Director of Technology Development
Show me the money!
ACTIVITY: Building a realistic market model
HOMEWORK: Continue building your own market model to quantify the revenue potential of your market segment
Speakers: Teddy Johnson
ITHS Director of Technology Development
Itemizing costs and staffing requirements to develop your product
ACTIVITY: Building a development cost model and hiring plan
HOMEWORK: Build your own cost model and hiring plan
HOMEWORK: Watch “Navigating America’s Seed Fund at NIH” in preparation for Funding Strategy session on October 15
Speakers: Melissa Vaught, PhD
ITHS Director of Research Development
Stephanie Fertig
NIH Director Small Business Program
Steve Flaim, PhD, FACC, FAHA
NIH NHLBI Investor-in-Residence, NuFund Venture Group Chair Emeritus
What is the right type of funding for each of your development phases?
Speaker: Fiona Wills, PhD
Associate Vice Provost for Innovation Development & Commercialization, University of Washington Technology Transfer Office
What IP is and why you need it
Speaker: Jesse Houchens, JD
Senior Corporate Associate, Wilson-Sonsini (advising clients on corporate goevernance, venture financing, mergers, and acquisitions
Who’s in, who’s out, and how to navigate changes
Speakers: Teddy Johnson
ITHS Director of Technology Development
Lynn Rose, PhD
Affiliate Associate Professor of Pharmacy in Regulatory Affairs at University of Washington and former Chief of Scientific Administration at Benaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason
Optimizing your clinical-regulatory program to achieve commercial goals
HOMEWORK: outline your protocol with inclusion and exclusion criteria to support future marketing claims
Speaker: Teddy Johnson
ITHS Director of Technology Development
How do you decide where to get started? Is the biggest market the best place to start?
Speaker: Lisa Stromme Warren
ITHS Director of Communications; former Strategic Media Relations and External Communications Manager for Washington State Department of Health; former Executive Producer for KIRO 7 news
What’s the title and take-away of your story? How to tell your story in 3 memorable, repeatable points
HOMEWORK: Create your pitch
Speaker: Teddy Johnson
ITHS Director of Technology Developement
Steve Flaim, PhD, FACC, FAHA
NIH NHLBI Investor-in-Residence and NuFund Venture Group Chair Emeritus
Additional guest to be announced
ACTIVITY: Pitch practice
HOMEWORK: Refine your pitch
Speaker: Teddy Johnson
ITHS Director of Technology Development
Making a name for yourself as you make a big splash in the market
ACTIVITY: Defining your brand to engage your market
HOMEWORK: Develop your brand and market strategy
Speaker: Teddy Johnson and invited guests