Transcript Slide 1

Tactics for Controlling Equity
Dilution in University Startups
July 20, 2011
Today’s Agenda
• Who Owns University IP
• University Spinout Creation
• Protecting the University from Future
Dilution
• Key Licensing Terms that Impact
Financing
• Protecting Founders from Dilution
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Who Owns University IP
Inventors that universities care about:
Faculty, Staff
and PhD
students - YES
Undergrads – NO (usually)
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Who Owns University IP
Just like a corporation, universities own the
IP created by its employees
• Do not assume altered by
Stanford v. Roche
US SCt ruling
–Bizarre set of facts and
bizarre ruling
–University will just be more careful with language in
employment documents
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Who Owns University IP
Normal process is disclosure by
inventor to TTO
• TTO not obligated to file patents, but often does at its
own expense
• Inventor is compensated
–Typical is 1/3 Department, 1/3 TTO, 1/3 Inventor
–Applies to license fees, royalties, equity value
–Each university has its own written policies re $$ split
• Some would argue that compensation is very attractive
incentive for inventor
–Remicade (NYU); Emtriva (Emory); Lyrica (Northwestern)
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University Spinout Creation
University has 2 routes for a technology
License to
spinout
License to
established
company
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University Spinout Creation
University has 2 routes for a technology
License to
startup
(spinout)
License to
established
company
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University Spinout Creation
And these are very different licensing
paths as far as the university is concerned
• With established company license, deal is cut and
papered and University collects $ and audits
• With startup company license, TTO needs to vet the
company, make sure that a market exists, make sure a
business model exists and generally get confident in the
startup team
– Sounds like a VC (but not)
• Under a given set of circumstances either route may be
preferred (often land grant university is more focused on
startups and economic development)
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University Spinout Creation
So, does the university care
about the startup team?
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How can faculty participate?
Is a PhD involved?
Who is CEO running the show?
What are university conflict policies?
Is the startup in a university incubator?
WHEN can the company pay for patent costs?
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University Spinout Creation
Critically, how are conflicts handled?
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Can faculty be “officer” of startup?
Can startup use university facilities?
Can startup use the faculty member’s research lab?
Are PhD’s co-mingled with startup?
Does university have a claim to new IP developed at
startup? The so called “grab” issue……
• Can startup fund research in inventor’s lab?
• And, who is the JUDGE?
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University Spinout Creation
The Judge
• Many schools have conflicts policies that look very
similar
• It is the implementation that varies
• It is the culture that varies
• It is the “old guard” vs “new guard” that varies
• Is the judge the department chair or college dean or
TTO administrator?
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University Spinout Creation
Reality is that judges
come in different flavors
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Protecting the University from Future Dilution
Universities take equity stake in
startup as part of license deal
• Dilution should be hoped for!
• Dilution should be expected
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Protecting the University from Future Dilution
But some protection is ok in early years
• Example 1: no dilution until after $X raised
– Early funders should not care
– Founders take it “on the chin”
– Keep it simple
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Protecting the University from Future Dilution
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But some protection is ok in early years
Example 2: University can invest going forward
Most do not (Stanford and MIT are exceptions,
but MIT only exercised 2 times)
Many top research universities have “sold” their
preemptive rights to Osage Ventures
Carnegie Mellon actually has taken equity for
patenting costs
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Protecting the University from Future Dilution
But some protection is ok in early years
• Example 3: The UNC simple license
model
– Received much attention in press and pubs
– UNC set terms for 1% royalty and 1% carve
out on change of control
– Carve is 100% non-dilutable
b/c not an equity stake
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Protecting the University from Future Dilution
But some protection is ok in early years
• Example 4: Convertible debt model for
initial slug
– Equity slug not valued until qualified round
occurs
– So university equity valued off that round price
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