A Website Tour of Funding Sources

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Innovation Garden State Holds First Ever Conference

High Tech At Old Nassau

High Tech at Rutgers

Corrections or additions?

This article by Kathleen McGinn Spring was prepared for the

January 2, 2002 edition of U.S.

1 Newspaper. All rights reserved.

A Website Tour of Funding Sources

A relative, in for a holiday visit, asked why New Jersey

is called the Garden State. The question came during one of our day

trips, all to Manhattan or Philadelphia. She was polite, and put no

mean twist on the question. But she was turned toward the window in

the back seat — facing four lanes of anonymous highway — as

the question came to her.

Quickly, the spouse and I spoke of truck farms, of New Jersey’s

agrarian

past, of the lovely countryside just a few miles in from many of the

highways. (At least the pig farms that used to grace upper stretches

of the Turnpike are gone.) Then I remembered a glossy ad I had seen

not long before. It showed a brilliantly green field of corn in which

scientists stood with — I thought I recalled — microchips

and test tubes.

“Oh, and New Jersey is starting to market itself as the Innovation

Garden State,” I informed our guest, explaining that our state

is number one in pharmaceutical firms in all the world, and is fertile

ground for start-ups in exciting fields like identification technology

and next generation consumer electronics.

Whew. New Jersey can be a hard sell. Great state, but as any casual

viewer of late night talk shows knows, something went badly awry with

its image a long time ago.

Prosperity New Jersey, the public/private partnership responsible

for that field-of-corn ad, is working to change that image, to cast

the state as the high tech hot house that it is. Its Innovation Garden

State marketing campaign is in full swing. In addition to

advertisements

— including quarter-page spots in the likes of The Wall Street

Journal — Innovation Garden State has its own website at

innovationgarden.org.

The website exists to market, devoting pages to touting the state’s

demographics — “New Jersey ranks fourth in the country for

patent grants.” and “New Jersey companies and research

institutions

have produced over 30 Nobel Prize winners.” But it also caters

to the technical community.

One of the coolest features of the site is a scrolling stock ticker,

which shows the fortunes of New Jersey’s technology companies in

almost

real time. While watching stock prices, visitors to the site can scan

breaking news stories on the state’s technology companies. News

content

comes from TechSourceNJ.com.

There is an impressive job search engine. Job hunters search by

keyword

and location, specifying how far from a given city they are willing

to work. Listings include posting date, extensive job descriptions,

and contact information.

Those who would rather run their own shows can go to the Innovation

Garden State’s funding database. Searches can use any or all of seven

criteria, including funding source (bank, city agency, etc.), type

of funding (bond, equity investment, loan guarantee, grant, etc.),

funding purpose (fixed assets, new employees, real estate, etc.),

and stage of investment (seed, mezzanine, buyout, etc.)

I played around with the funding database to see, just for fun, if

I could get backing to start an Internet company. In doing so, I found

that using multiple criteria leads to frustration. I monkeyed around

with several variables, including the funding amount — going as

low as $1,000, and as high as $500,000 — and the funding purpose,

for which I chose “new product development” one time and

“new

employees” another. None of my scenarios yielded any funding

options

at all.

Thinking that perhaps all lending entities have programmed in a

“go

away” response whenever the word “Internet” appears, I

thought bigger, and looked for funding for a growing biotechnology

company seeking a credit line for big bucks. Still, the database

turned

up no options. About to conclude that the thing was broken, I went

to the top of the funding page and chose “funding options.”

There I clicked on one category after another — banks, city

agencies,

the Economic Development Organization. That was the ticket. Under

each category there were multiple entries, and each gave comprehensive

information about the type of funding it provides, and contact

information

for applying for a piece of the action.

Checking to see if I could have searched the other way, I took the

lending criteria institutions listed and plugged the variables into

the search engine. Sure enough, I did come up with options. But I

do think it is easier to search the other way, because, for instance,

one entity might fund a $25,000 fixed asset, but not $30,000 in real

estate. It is easy to miss opportunites by starting with a narrow

search.

In addition to job and funding searches, the site provides full

listings

for all of the state’s technology incubators, and posts notices of

meetings of interest to technology workers and entrepreneurs.

For out-of-state technology companies considering making a home in

the Garden State — despite the ribbing it gets from Letterman

et al. — the site has extensive demographic information and maps

listing technology companies by county and industry. It even has a

relocation expert, Angela DiDomenico of Bernardsville-based

Professional

Presentations, who answers E-mail queries about life in the state.

Even those outside the technology community would do well to visit

the site in advance of visits from out-of-state friends and relatives.

Did you know that New Jersey contains 700 fresh water lakes? Or that

it has more scientists per capita than any other state? Hmm. Science

and technology and business — perfect together?

— Kathleen McGinn Spring

Top Of PageInnovation Garden State Holds First Ever Conference

It’s all about perception. New Jersey doesn’t get the

respect it deserves when the talk turns to top locations for

technology

companies. Innovation Garden State, an initiative of Prosperity New

Jersey, was formed to counter the perception. A public/private

initiative,

it has been boasting of the state’s high-tech attributes on

television,

in print, and on the Internet since the summer of 2000. Another prong

has just been added to the publicity campaign with the formation of

the Innovation Garden State Alliance.

Steve Sasala, president and CEO of Prosperity New Jersey, says

it was the publicity campaign, and especially the Internet site

(www.innovationgarden.org),

which caught the notice of institutions. “The real guts is the

website,” says Sasala. “People spend an average of 12 minutes

on it.” In fact, print and television ads are now useful largely

because they drive traffic to the website.

Innovation Garden State Alliance partners include the New Jersey

Technology

Council, the Foundation of the University of Medicine & Dentistry

of New Jersey, HealthCare Institute of New Jersey, the New Jersey

Commission on Science and Technology, the New Jersey Chamber of

Commerce,

and the Liberty Science Center.

Initially publicity efforts focused on raising awareness out of state.

Now, the campaign is adding an in-state component with its first

public

event. The Innovators Conference takes place on Friday, January 11,

at 9 a.m. at McDonnell Hall on the Princeton University campus.

Speakers

include John Marburger III, science advisor to President Bush;

Ira Flatow, host of NPR’s Science Friday; Congressman Rush

Holt; and Shirley Tighman, president of Princeton University.

Cost: $60. Call 609-984-4924.

Innovation Garden State is about attracting knowledge-based

businesses,

and, says Sasala, far and away the most effective lure is an educated,

technically savvy workforce. Directly going after companies is a goal,

but he says that a more realistic approach to building up the state’s

roster of high-tech companies is to make the state attractive to

knowledge

workers. Get a good base of highly-skilled workers, he says, and

companies

will follow.

The organization’s publicity campaign to date has been aimed at those

workers throughout the country and around the world. The Innovators

Conference is a first step toward nurturing home-grown talent. In

addition to the speakers, there will be activities for children.

“We want to get kids’ attention,” says Sasala. “We want

to create home-grown knowledge workers.” Liberty Science Center

and the New Jersey Network will be on hand with interactive

attractions

to show the youngsters that science can be fun.

Lighting a spark under potential technology workers is an important

aim of the Innovators Conference, and luring technology workers

one-by-one

is the first goal of Innovation Garden State. But the organization

is not shy about its desire to scoop up large numbers of the workers

by persuading their employers to relocate in New Jersey. Lately,

Sasala

has taken some criticism for what has been seen by some as

inappropriate

opportunism on the latter front.

Prosperity New Jersey, parent of Innovation Garden State, has been

running television ads offering free, temporary office space and

services

to businesses displaced by the attack on the World Trade Center. After

taking some calls from New Yorkers who sense poaching, Sasala declares

that no such thing was on his mind.

“I’ve always traded on two things, integrity and truth,” he

says. “I know what my intentions are. We’re offering what we say

we’re offering, temporary space.” His organization has been

“particularly

careful” with New York, he says, avoiding running any ads

extolling

New Jersey in the city.

Treading carefully in the Big Apple, at least for now, Prosperity

New Jersey is busy talking to companies elsewhere. “Quite frankly,

outside New York City, our position is full tilt, let’s go,” says

Sasala.

A native of western Pennsylvania and graduate of Duquesne (Class of

1971), Sasala holds a master’s degree in urban and regional planning

from the University of Pittsburgh and a master’s in business

management

from R.P.I. After four years in the Air Force and 15 years working

for mid-sized consulting firms in Connecticut and Pennsylvania, Sasala

came to New Jersey 12 years ago to work in former Governor Christie

Whitman’s administration. He was department commissioner in the

corrections,

insurance, and community affairs offices.

Asked to name the single biggest obstacle to attract business to New

Jersey, Sasala does not name traffic or sky-high housing prices.

Instead,

with absolutely no hesitation. “Perception,” he says. Areas

with which New Jersey competes for technology companies — Boston,

northern California, and Washington D.C.’s suburbs, for example —

also have high housing prices and traffic. Companies will deal with

those variables, he says. It is perception that tends to be the deal

breaker.

“There is a sense,” Sasala says, “that New Jersey is not

the most sophisticated, environmentally friendly state.” He

himself

had a somewhat negative view of the state before relocating to bucolic

Sergeantsville. With the exception of trips to Atlantic City when

he was growing up, his view of New Jersey had been all-Turnpike.

Now it is Sasala’s job to persuade the most desirable workers and

their bosses that New Jersey is the place to be. The Innovators

Conference

will hedge the bet by preaching the message in-state and to children.

This, Innovation Garden State’s first such event, is a test. Sasala

says that if it is successful, the next conference will seek an

international

audience.

Top Of PageHigh Tech At Old Nassau

At Princeton University, the Center for Photonics

and Optoelectronic Materials (POEM) is an often-tapped resource

for technical assistance and valuable technology, says Joseph X.

Montemarano,

director of industrial liaison for Princeton. Montemarano works with

POEM and the other scientific programs at Princeton University to

set up entrepreneurial and corporate opportunities (U.S.

1, August 22, 2001). POEM members can use the fabrication labs and

clean room at Princeton’s Engineering Quadrangle as part of sponsored

research collaborations.

“At POEM, our organizing principle is to surround ourselves with

a user community,” says Montemarano. “From where we began

— in photonic materials and spectroscopy — we surrounded

ourselves

with the telecommunications world, and we started to have people come

to us with other real world problems, such as how to use IR night

vision to see in the dark or to do environmental detection.”

POEM’s first official industry partner was Sensors Unlimited,

(www.sensorsinc.com).

Among those collaborating at POEM are Pennsylvania-based Global

Photonic

Energy Corporation, Hopewell-based PD-LD (with Vladimir Ban,

www.pd-ld.com)

Princeton Optronics (www.princetonoptronics.com), Universal Display

Corporation (www.ultrafastoptical.com), and Applications Specific

Integrated Photonics (www.asipinc.com).

POEM is directed by James Sturm, who also directs the Center for

Biomolecular Applications for Nanoscale Structures, with two

state-funded

laboratories in the J-wing of the engineering quad, connected by a

clean room. Scientists here take procedures formerly done with test

tubes and shrink them so they can be performed by microscopic vessels

on microfluidic computer chips. Among the corporate collaborators

are College Road-based Orchid Biosciences, and Pharmaseq, at Princeton

Corporate Plaza.

Compared to POEM, the connection between science and application at

Princeton Materials Institute is less tightly coupled; it focuses

on fundamental science, though it does progress to applications.

Directed

by Anthony Evans, it offers facilities and staff to help organize

proposals, find productive partners, and manage grants and

intellectual

properties.

The building for the Lewis Sigler Institute of Integrative Genomics

is under construction. In the pharmaceutical area, university faculty

members have founded Cellular Genomics Inc. and Quorex

Pharmaceuticals,

which is trying to develop a new class of broad-spectrum

anti-infective

drugs.

Princeton University’s Center for the Study of Brain, Mind, and

Behavior (www.csbmb.princeton.edu) does interdisciplinary

research on brain function and how it gives rise to human function

and cognition. Among its projects are using an MRI machine to study

neural economics — brain mechanisms that underlie decisions.

Top Of PageHigh Tech at Rutgers

At Rutgers, students work side-by-side with renowned

professors, conducting research in a wide range of intriguing areas,

says Joseph Blumberg, manager of science communications at the

university,

who lists just a few of the many research areas:

Researchers at the W.M. Keck Center for CollaborativeNeurosciencefocus on moving scientific discoveries in neurological and mentaldiseases from the research stage to the clinical stage as rapidlyas possible. A major initiative is concentrating on worldwidecollaborativeresearch on therapies to restore function to spinal cord injuredpeople.Using the world’s largest cell repository from families affected withpsychiatric disorders, Rutgers geneticists are exploring the complexgenetic basis of diseases such as schizophrenia, manic depression,Alzheimer’s, autism and alcoholism.Rutgers is also home to the Protein Data Bank, a computer-based,three-dimensional “atlas” of biological macromolecules,accessibleto scientists searching for effective new drugs with few or no sideeffects.Researchers in the Division of Computer and Information Scienceare working to create technology and expand its role in 21st-centurylife in such things as lifelike human-computer interaction, newInternetsearch engines and user-friendly wireless information dispensersdistributedthroughout the environment.The Center for Advanced Information Processing supports researchwith a focus on industry-academic interactions. Its most recentinitiativeidentified issues in homeland security and encouraged research,particularlythose areas that may benefit from university-industry cooperation.Astronomers are participating in the South African Large Telescopeproject (to become the largest optical telescope in the world) anduse the Hubble Space Telescope, the orbital Chandra X-ray Observatoryand ground-based systems to study phenomena including black holes,dark matter, supernovae and the evolution of galaxies and starsystems.The Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine is a jointinitiative with UMDNJ that pursues basic research in cell anddevelopmentalbiology, molecular genetics and structural biology as well aspotentialapplications in cancer and AIDS.At the New Jersey Center for Biomaterials, a consortium withUMDNJ and NJIT, scientists are working to improve health care andthe quality of life by developing advanced biomedical products fortissue repair and replacement, and the delivery of drugs. The centerhas just been awarded $150,000 from the New Jersey Commission onScienceand Technology.Its School of Engineering researchers explore technologies andmethods ranging from biomedical devices that can save and transformlives; to wireless internet available anytime, anywhere; to roads,bridges and buildings that are safer, longer lasting, and cost lessto build.Whether studying volcanic vents at the bottom of the ocean or usingsatellites and submersibles to provide “underwater weatherreports”for vacationers and the fishing industry, scientists at the Instituteof Marine and Coastal Sciences are at a worldwide focal point ofocean-related education, research, and service.Next StoryCorrections or additions?This page is published by PrincetonInfo.com— the web site for U.S. 1 Newspaper in Princeton, New Jersey.

CE – US1

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