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University Industry Series: Nestle and IBM



Monthly Open Innovation Webinar Series
on Building Strategic Relationships
Between Industry and Universities

Each month we will look at the experiences and visions of large companies addressing the issue of building strategic relationships with universities as part of a new open innovation and commercialization environment


NESTLE and IBM
Tuesday, September 8, 1:00-2:30pm ET (10:00-11:30am PT)



Speakers:

Helmut Traitler
(V.P. Innovation Partnerships, Nestle)

Dawn C. Tew
(Program Director for Collaborative Research Initiatives, IBM)



Co-Moderated by:

Val Livada
(Senior Lecturer, Sloan School of Business at MIT; Founder Weybridge Partners)

Robert Gruetzmacher
(Director of Technology Commercialization, DuPont's Center for Collaborative Research and Education)



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Click here for Dawn's slides


Click here for Helmut's slides


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PROGRAM DESCRIPTION:

This webinar series is about how companies work or want to work with universities to create value for both themselves and the universities. The ecology of innovation is undergoing a profound change where a collaborative set of activities need to effectively connect academic institutions with the business community. Universities are becoming key sources of discovery and are playing an ever increasing role in how industry innovates. Global competition, rising R&D costs and thus the need to get more products to the market sooner are some factors forcing companies to reach out to research universities for new ideas and capability. Licensing, corporate sponsored research, consulting engagements, venture capital investment, gifts, and employment are just some of the ways used to build strategic relationships between industry and universities, and are becoming a regular part of the developing open innovation environment.

Helmut will discuss the challenge of creating innovation partnerships in a large corporation using the example of Nestlé. His initiatives have led to the build up of a network of more than a million researchers worldwide, including science universities, venture capital, strategic suppliers and government laboratories, that supports the 4,500 people in Nestlé Food and Beverages R&D.

Dawn will discuss how in the 21st century, closed in-house collaborative models are evolving to open models and leveraging entrepreneurs worldwide. Today, there is a greater need for industry and academia to find ways to engage more quickly and create innovation that has true global impact. IBM's OCR program addresses this need by enabling researchers to actively collaborate with faculty and students on a number of strategically defined projects, specifically chosen for their immense societal importance, technical difficulty and need for a collaborative effort. Now in its fourth year, she'll review collaboration successes, lessons learned and research impact.


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COST: Free, but registration required.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE?: This series is online. You need a computer with web access for the visual/audio. Q&A is conducted by a chat box to the speakers.

WHO SHOULD PARTICIPATE IN THE WEBINAR?: These webinars are open to anyone interested in how universities and industry can better collaborate to commercialize R&D. In particular, we invite Global 1000, VCs, angel investors and university officials.

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Helmut Traitler
(V.P. Innovation Partnerships, Nestle)

Bio

Helmut Traitler is Vice President of Innovation Partnerships at Nestlé focused on exploring and developing the company's open innovation model. His initiatives have led to the build up of a network of more than a million researchers worldwide, including science universities, venture capital, strategic suppliers and government laboratories, that supports the 4,500 people in Nestlé Food and Beverages R&D.

_______________________


Dawn C. Tew
(Program Director for Collaborative Research Initiatives, IBM)

Bio

Dawn Tew is the Program Director for Collaborative Research Initiatives in IBM’s Global University Programs. In this role she launched IBM’s Open Collaborative Research (OCR) award program in 2006. IBM’s OCR award program promotes the development of open software solutions that address strategically important topics across a wide range of areas within Computer Science, Engineering, Mathematics and other disciplines with leading universities worldwide. The goal of the program is to accelerate innovation by openly sharing collaboration results to the benefit of our partners, customers and IBM. In addition, Dawn represents IBM on the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) Corporate Member Council (CMC) and the National Academies’ University-Industry Demonstration Partnership (UIDP). Before moving to Global University Programs, Dawn was a University Recruiting Relations Manager responsible for developing strategic partnerships with universities to provide diverse, technical and business talent for IBM hiring programs and served on several College Industrial Advisory Boards for Women and Minority in Engineering Programs.

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Robert R. Gruetzmacher
(Director of Technology Commercialization, DuPont's Center for Collaborative Research and Education)

Bio

Dr. Gruetzmacher is the Director of Technology Commercialization in DuPont's Center for Collaborative Research and Education. During his career with DuPont, his responsibilities have included research, development, manufacturing, and marketing in the photopolymer imaging products and medical diagnostic businesses. He managed DuPont’s infectious disease diagnostics research group in Boston, co-managed a food quality assurance business venture, and helped lead development of DuPont's technology transfer group and intellectual assets business.

In his current role his responsibilities include managing the unrestricted grants program, leading DuPont’s efforts to find appropriate university partners for sponsored and collaborative research, negotiating agreements and seeks new business opportunities with the academic setting including startups, and advises company-wide on licensing-related matters. Most recently, he has been asked to take a lead in facilitating corporate-wide implementation of an “open innovation” R&D model.

Dr. Gruetzmacher holds a Ph.D. from Case Western Reserve University, and was the recipient of a National Institutes of Health Postdoctoral Fellowship. He has served as a trustee of the Licensing Executives Society and participates in several international forums dealing with topics such as university/company transactions, knowledge management, and the management and valuation of intellectual assets. He has authored publications and is invited frequently to gives talks on these topics. He is a certified licensing Professional and a member of the Licensing Executives Society, the American Chemical Society, the Association of University Technology Managers, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He is on the industrial advisory boards of the Larta Institute in Los Angeles, the Larta/USDA Commercialization Assistance Program and the Department of Macromolecular Science and Engineering at Case Western Reserve University. He was recently elected to the University-Industry Demonstration Partnership (UIDP) board of directors.

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Val R. Livada
(Senior Lecturer, Sloan School of Business at MIT; Founder Weybridge Partners)

Bio

Val Livada founded Weybridge Partners in 1996 as a network of formal and informal associations of practitioners and organizations focused on the successful commercialization of technology. The network includes business and technology consultants, venture capitalists, academics, entrepreneurs, lawyers, etc in the US and abroad.

Val brings 30 years of consulting experience to his clients. He was a Director at Braxton Associates, an international strategy planning consulting firm, and a Vice President at Pugh-Roberts Associates, a technology management firm established by Prof. Ed Roberts from MIT. Prior to establishing Weybridge Partners, he was the leading practitioner in the area of innovation management for the PA Consulting Group. During his career, Dr. Livada has combined expertise in the areas of strategic planning and organizational dynamics, with a detailed knowledge in the areas of innovation, product development, and R&D management.

Through the years, clients have included Fortune 500-type companies such as: GM, Eli Lilly, Nokia, Hitachi and has recently founded an East Coast corporate venture capital network. Val sits on the Board of Directors for Monarch Antenna, a Delphi Automotive spinout, and Polynova Composites. He is an business advisor to Liquid Bits a 3D animation start-up, Vanguard Solar, a thin film photovoltaic company, LuminZ an MIT spin out in LED lighting, Porticus a voice printing company, and Rapport Inc. a multicore chip company in CA. In addition, he consults to another dozen emerging companies.

Dr. Livada is also active in efforts to stimulate activities between US and European/Far Eastern organizations. In Europe Val has worked with many firms in the UK, Switzerland, Germany and Scandinavia. He has been instrumental in establishing US operations for several established and emerging European companies, including Nokia Research and Pro2Kem. In the Far East, traditionally strong ties to South Korea, Japan and Taiwan are now being expanded into China.

Val received his undergraduate degree from MIT and his MA/ PhD from Tufts University. Currently he is Senior Lecturer, on Corporate Entrepreneurship, at the Sloan School of Business at MIT where he also served as Reaserch Affiliate and Guest Lecturer for the last 15 years. At MIT, Val is leading a joint research project, with the Wharton Business School, on Corporate Venture Capital, is a Catalyst at the Deshpande Center, and a consultant to the Cambridge University/MIT Institute on various aspects of Innovation and Corporate/University partnerships.


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