Technology Transfer and the University: an orientation for new faculty at Johns Hopkins University

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Johns Hopkins Technology Transfer Bringing the benefits of discovery to the World. Technology Transfer and the University: an orientation for new faculty at Johns Hopkins University Wesley D. Blakeslee, J.D. Johns Hopkins Technology Transfer New Faculty Orientation October 10, 2006

Emergence of technology transfer as a priority for the University

In the beginning... prior to 1980, all inventions conceived or reduced to practice in the performance of federally funded research were owned by the federal government.

Bayh-Dole Act of 1980 stimulate the US economy and facilitate technology transfer universities could elect to take title to inventions conceived or reduced to practice in the performance of a federal grant, contract, or cooperative agreement and are obligated to...

Obligations of Bayh-Dole Disclose each new invention File US & international patent applications Attempt to license inventions Share license revenues with inventors Use remainder to support research & education

AUTM Licensing Survey of 2004 $1.122 billion in gross license income 10,517 new US patent applications, up 32.8% from FY03 filings of 7,921 3,680 US patents issued 4,783 new licenses and options 462 new companies formed

Income leaders Columbia - $220 M (90% from 4 technologies, no longer participating in AUTM survey) New York University - $109 M Stanford - $47 M University of Minnesota - $45.5 M WARF - $47 M Florida State - $14 M - royalties down from $52 M in 2002 from Taxol MIT - $25.8 M

Basic licensing facts Majority of all licenses to small companies (< 500 employees) > 80% of income derived from < 20% of licenses < 1% of licenses yield > $1M in annual income**

Technology Transfer at JHU

History of JHU technology transfer First tech. transfer office positioned at Homewood in 1973 1st published IP guidelines by Trustees 86 SOM licensing office established 86 Trustee s revised IP policy 92 Homewood & APL offices established 98 Trustees approve simplified sharing formula 01 Office consolidation creating LTD - 02 Renaming of LTD to JHTT 05

Krieger School of Arts & Sciences Whiting School of Engineering Bloomberg School of Public Health The Peabody Institute Nitze School of Advanced International Studies School of Medicine School of Nursing School of Professional Studies in Business and Education

JHTT Mission Statement The Johns Hopkins Technology Transfer office furthers the academic mission of the Johns Hopkins University by facilitating the commercialization of University innovations for the public good by: Encouraging invention disclosure Protecting and managing the University's intellectual property; Enabling technology development and licensing; and Encouraging and supporting entrepreneurs.

JHTT Vision Statement master and lead best practice in academic technology transfer leveraging JHU IP for monetary and non-monetary value engage strategically with JHU stakeholders faculty, industry, sister institutions, funding entities to achieve knowledge stewardship as a component of social responsibility and public service, the third leg of the academic mission facilitate access to JHU technology by being as resourceful as possible with JHU knowledge advances and research expertise in a manner which preserves and advances the quality of scholarship at Johns Hopkins University

JHU IP Policy As a condition of employment, Hopkins faculty and staff are obligated to report inventions made with university resources (to JHTT) and to assign title to the University in exchange for a share of net income from licensing the inventions.

Revenue sharing 35% inventor s s personal share 15% inventor s s research share 15% inventor s s department 30% school, 5% university with 25/10 to school and university for royalties exceeding $300K

What is IP? Not ideas. Ideas are not protectable, except by confidentiality Embodiments of ideas are protectable Personal Property Intangible (intellectual property) Patents Copyrights Trademarks, servicemarks Know how Data Tangible (biological materials, software)

How to Report an Invention www.jhtt.jhu.edu Report of Invention Disclosure Form (ROI) To be completed and submitted to JHTT by anyone who believes they have developed a new invention. Enables JHTT to evaluate the invention Submit this form with all inventor(s) and Department Director(s) signatures. Visit the JHTT web site at http://www.jhtt.jhu.edu/for Hopkins Inventors/index.html for.pdf and Word downloadable formats of this form.

New JHU reports of invention 300 250 # of Disclosures 200 150 100 50 0 FY 99 FY 00 FY 01 FY 02 FY 03 FY 04 FY 05

JHTT patent portfolio 3000 # of Patent Applications 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 FY 99 FY 00 FY 01 FY 02 FY 03 FY 04 FY 05

JHTT Invention Management New ROI (2 days) Evaluation (30 days) Investment Decision (4-6 6 weeks) Marketing (Active/Passive: immediate 2 years) Negotiation (Term Sheet/Agreement) License (Target: 1-31 3 months after terms agreed)

JHU Knowledge Transfer Results for FY04 First in country in federal funding (second to entire system of California), $1.016B First among peers (top 15 universities in U.S. with research expenditures over $500M and with medical schools) in filing for patents on inventions disclosed 4 th quartile last among peers in average royalty revenue per license and total revenue earned

Summary why think about IP? Understand rights of use and access to your intellectual work product Promote knowledge stewardship by availing access to knowledge advances through all vehicles, academic and market Create value, monetary and non- monetary, for authors, inventors and academic units which support them

www.jhtt.jhu.edu Johns Hopkins Technology Transfer Bringing the benefits of discovery to the World. www.jhtt.jhu.edu Wesley D. Blakeslee, J.D. Johns Hopkins Technology Transfer wdb@jhu.edu 410-516 516-8300