If you want your product idea to succeed, one of the first steps is to interest potential investors.
This can be hard for academic researchers, whose previous focus will have been on getting published, winning grants and teaching classes, says Javier Garcia-Martinez, a chemist at the University of Alicante in Spain, and founder of Rive Technology
This episode is part of Business of science, a six-part podcast series exploring how to commercialize your research and launch a spin-off. The series looks at investor pitches, patents, technology transfer, scaling up and how to survive the inevitable setbacks along the way.
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Beyond academia: how to “de-risk” a mid-career move to industry
How to select your first scientific role in industry
Debunking the industry–academia barrier myth
Beyond academia: Planning the perfect exit strategy for a scientific career move
Breaking down the barriers that curtail industry collaborations and career moves
How the pandemic widened scientists' mentoring networks
How to keep the scientific-mentoring magic alive
The many mentoring types explained
Mentoring, coaching, supervising: what’s the difference?
How COVID-19 changed scientific mentoring
The mentoring messages that can get lost in translation
Why science needs strong mentors
Communities, COVID and credit: the state of science collaborations
Business of science: The transferable skills that straddle academia and industry
Business of science: The setbacks that can help your start-up succeed
Business of science: How to grow your start-up
Business of science: How technology-transfer teams can help your spin-off succeed
Business of science: How to register a patent
Science diversified: Tackling an ‘ableist’ culture in research
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