Needs of Global Start-up companies (Deliverable 2) GlobalStart wp1 Studies Deliverable 2 Needs of Global Start-up Companies Table of contents p



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Loan from Innovation Fund

R&D loan for Proteomics business area


Launch of new R&D program in 2005

Business concept

  • Plan

  • Objectives


3 business areas were planned to pursue in Company


Business plan was formulated, company existed still “on the paper” without own facilities.
Joint project with university to get grant/loan from Estonian Innovation Fund

Management was hired
Lab facilities were rented and equipped
“normal” business was started

New business area was launched. Two directions of exploitation of R&D results:

Restructuring of one business area to expand our technological capabilities from protein expression to protein production and protein purification areas.

Technology platform
Production mode
Market (industry, customer, competitors)

A lot of R&D work had been conducted in University lab


Licence agreement with university was signed to transfer IPR to company.
Work was done in university labs

Extensive investments into equipment was made. Product family was tripled (based on similar technologies)
Systematic work for finding new customers

Patent application was submitted
Market survey was too limited due to limited financial resources

New technologies are licensed in and combined with in-house technologies.
Growth from lab scale to industrial scale
Market survey has to be sufficient to validate business plan.

Finance

  • Source and

  • Use of capital




2500 EUR invested by founders to meet minimal capital criteria



First sales to the customer helped to pay for salary expenses and lab supplies

Investments were financed by loan (200.000 EUR), everyday expenses were covered by sales.

Appr 150.000 EUR loan from Enterprise Estonia was used mainly for R&D as equipment basis was already existent before.

Grants combined with equity

People

  • Management,

  • Other employees

No personnel hired, people worked in University


First lab technicians were hired

Very soon the staff grew to 12 people

New R&D group was formed, later 2 persons were hired to S&M department

Hiring new scientists.

Partners/ Network

  • Purpose

  • Advantages

  • Mode of cooperation

First customer was willing to start buying services




Collabotation agreements with universities, Estonian Biocenter etc. (More like declarations)

Started to find partners in other European countries

Try to close pre-agreements with users of the technology/products in early stage.

3. Internationalization



Know-how/technology

The company invested heavily in R&D work at the University lab in Tartu. People involved had strong technology know-how in the field. Company has limited international cooperation in R&D.

Quattromed has an experience with a number of Finnish and Swedish clients in conducting research experiments. Presently joint projects running with Canadians, Italians and Germans.
Market

The company clients are Estonian clinics, the market share is approximately 60-70%. The costs of expanding abroad are too high in the relation to the size of the company. In addition there is a strong competition in the field.

Fermentas, a Lithuanian company became the first retailer of Quattromed products.
Establishing contacts abroad the company’s managers experience difficulties in adjusting to regional business cultures and defining target customer group. It would have been useful for the company to have more information on potential clients than just the information from web pages. The product of the company is highly customized, thus the company usually interested in establishing close relations with its clients. It is rather difficult to initiate this kind of relation outside well-known home market. Even taking part in relevant fairs does not always bring expected effect.
Finance

Quattromed is the only biotechnology company in Estonia, the shares of which have been subject to trade sale. In 2002, FIT Biotech Plc, a Finnish biotech company that since 2001 also runs R&D facilities in Estonia, acquired 22.4 % of the shares of company. FIT Biotech also has the option to obtain the remaining shares of

Quattromed, up to 100 %, until 2006.

TTO support

Limited support of TTO with respect to the internationalization process, as the company customers are mostly Estonians.



Evaluation of TTO support


The university based TTO support was generally quite useful. University’s Institute of Technology is especially valuable; its functions need to be developed to build stronger connections between university faculties and businesses. The Enterprise Estonia (business support agency) support has unfortunately limited value-added for the company like Quattromed. First of all, most of Enterprise Estonia’s programs are oriented at larger companies with stable market and stable turnover. The companies that do not spend much on marketing and cannot ensure high ratio of self-financing have almost no suitable programs to apply for. Secondly, Enterprise Estonia has a generalist consulting profile and does not have competent employees to provide specific information on biotechnology industry in Europe.


ESTLA

Spin-off from the University of Tartu


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