MonoMano Progress Update

We checked in with the MonoMano team to check on the progress of their one arm control bar for cyclists, one of the first funded Innovocracy Projects. Things are moving along for the business they’ve formed around their invention (with a little help from the Innovocracy team!).

From David Narrow of MonoMano:

“MonoMano has now transitioned from manufacturing to sales and marketing efforts. We have established a $50 installation quote with Park Ave bike shop, have a Facebook ad targeted to stroke survivors, and have begun making sales calls to adaptive sports organizations and physical therapy outpatient centers. I have attached a photo of our most recent handlebar, and should have a photo with the handlebar mounted on the trike coming soon.”

Actually the image above showed up right after Dave sent that message! Fantastic work guys and thanks to everyone whose funding helped make this a reality. More images and info on the MonoMano website.

Innovocracy is a Peer Network

We realized fairly early on that the Innovocracy business model was not going to be ‘help academic innovators raise funding and take a cut. It wasn’t viable and we feel strongly that as much of the funds raised as possible should go directly to the innovator. This is a key unique factor for the Innovocracy model in academia where very often a portion of all funding goes to the university for overhead. In our platform all funds raised, excepting credit card processing fees (which do not go to us), end up being used for actual innovation.

So what was the model? After all, this thing needs money to grow. What we did realize early on is that we are building a network. Each time a university joins us that network is expanded by hundreds of thousands of potential supporters and thousands of potential innovators: Students, faculty, administrators, alumni, employees, parents and friends. Each university member expands the network by that much potential. This is the lever that moves innovation in academia. Innovocracy is a peer network.

Wikipedia is a peer network. Facebook is its own kind of peer network, actually a network of networks. How important is this? Take a look at this video promoting a new book on the subject. It gives a very clear explanation of just how important this phenomenon is already.

Thanks to Fred Wilson for his post on peer networks and entrepreneurial communities.

VizWiz and The Socially Beneficial App: Support This Innovocracy Project

“Another, called VizWiz, allowed them to take a picture of an item and pose questions about it to an online community of sighted people.

At one point, Charlson posted the question, “What does this box say?” Seconds later, a response was read aloud by the device: “Honey Maid graham crackers,” the phone said.

With VizWiz, “I have 10,000 people in my pocket waiting to help me,” Charlson said. “It’s amazing.”

From Boston.com article on the use of apps to aid the visually impaired.

One of our current Innovocracy funding Projects is VizWiz, a iPhone/iPad app that reads print for visually disabled people. The premise is simple but the execution is complex: The user points their iOS device at printed material and takes a photo. The photo is transmitted to a website where a volunteer reads it aloud. That reading is transmitted to the device, in real time, and it is read back to the user.

VizWiz is raising money on Innovocracy to make their app scalable, in other words to go from serving 5000 users with over 50,000 translations to many times that. The funds they raise will help the app reach many more people without compromising quality. This not only means increasing their volunteer base and the ability of their web site to handle volume but it also puts them on a path to automating the translation from print to speech.

“Despite their limitations, the apps are still a means to reducing such dependence on others, according to Charlson. “There’s absolutely a rush,” he said. “There’s a feeling of acceptance and inclusion that only comes as a result of a high level of independence.”

As we’ve written about, Innovocracy is not just about creating profitable products and services. These products need to have a core function that benefits society. VizWiz is a prime example of how this works. The app is free and the volunteers are unpaid. The users’ quality of life is impacted in a meaningful and positive way. And all it takes is a donation of a few dollars from you to take this to the next level. To Donate Visit This Page.

We see that as a total win-win situation.

VizWiz was developed out of research from the University of Rochester, a founding Innovocracy Network Member Institution.

Businesses Are Networks, Organizations Are Networks, We Are Networks

At Innovocracy we have a vision of creating a network of innovation in higher education, a network composed of a hundred or more of the top research universities in the world. We’re creating a platform that member universities can plug into and that is optimized to foster commercial innovation from their research. But why a network?

Networks Thrive When We Remove Barriers To Entry

In the last few years network theory has come out of the lab and into our lives in a big way. Social networks like Facebook and LinkedIn show us how networks are created by making connections across all kinds of barriers- geographic, age, income, education, cultural and more. These barriers dissipate when a platform comes along that makes it easy for anyone to connect with a click. Connections are one piece of the network puzzle.

Networks Spread As Connections Multiply

The second piece are the nodes or hubs that the connections connect to. With the social networks we become hubs as others connect to us and we reciprocate. Think of it as spokes radiating outward and connecting to hubs that, in turn connect to others. That’s where network theory gets interesting- and relevant. One connection multiplies into hundreds or thousands very quickly with a hub and spoke model where barriers to making connections are eliminated.

But we are already members of many networks. Businesses are networks, organizations are networks, we ourselves are incredibly complex networks of cells, genes, DNA and more. Connections are not something you pick-up at networking events, they are lifeblood. Networks are the power grid of society.

Innovocracy’s network is designed for one overriding purpose: To facilitate innovation coming out of academic research communities. It does this by leveraging the power of a strong network. With a few clicks a Project owner (inventor) using Innovocracy to raise funds can reach connected supporters anywhere within the network, potentially millions of them. But it goes beyond fundraising.

We support innovation that contributes to the common good. When we come across an invention that can change people’s lives, we do more than help them raise a few thousand dollars. We use our network to tap into resources that are far more valuable: Business and legal advice, potential partners and investors, manufacturing and distribution resources and more. These networks help that innovation reach those who need it most.

Universities are huge networks unto themselves but often it is difficult to connect into their various constituencies. When a university joins the Innovocracy network we work with the university to make it easy for their constituents with an interest in innovation to connect to those who are creating. We believe there is immense power for good to be tapped into by building our network and fostering connections without barriers to entry.

Innovocracy Announces Academic Crowdfunding Project for an App for the Visually Impaired

VizWiz App Builds on a University of Rochester Prototype Already Used by 5,000 People to Answer 50,000 Questions

  • Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on Google+Share on LinkedInEmail a friend

Rochester, NY (PRWEB) August 10, 2012

Contact: Martin Edic, 585-727-3119

Earlier this year, the University of Rochester Human Computer Interaction Group developed an initial iOS application called VizWiz, that blind people can use to answer visual questions in their everyday lives. Users simply take a picture and speak a question they’d like to know about it, and their questions are answered by people out on the web, usually in under a minute and all for free.

Thus far, answers have been provided primarily by workers on Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, a paid microtasking marketplace. In order to broaden the availability of the service to a larger portion of the visually impaired community, the project is now seeking crowdfunding through the Innovocracy platform.

“We would like to create a web site to serve as a hub and answering center for VizWiz volunteers. The site will allow users to sign up to answer questions, track worker quality (and perhaps give rewards to the best ones), and, most importantly, allow VizWiz to remain free to users,” says Jeff Bigham, Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science at the University of Rochester. He adds, “Building a volunteer workforce may eventually allow for more ambitious VizWiz services, such as a streaming video option”.

New supporters can make donations through the VizWiz project page on Innovocracy (http://innovocracy.org/vizwiz-support-network) as well as download the current version of the application on the Apple App Store (http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/vizwiz/id439686043).

About the Innovator
In 2009, Jeff appeared on the MIT Technology Review Top 35 Innovators Under 35 for his work on Web-Anywhere, a free screen reader that can be used with practically any web browser on any operating system. He is also the recipient of the NSF CAREER Award which is the National Science Foundation’s most prestigious awards in support of junior faculty who exemplify the role of teacher-scholars. Jeff is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Rochester where he heads the Rochester Human Computer Interaction Group (ROC HCI). His work is at the intersection of human-computer interaction, human computation, and artificial intelligence, with a focus on developing innovative technology that serves people with disabilities in their everyday lives.

About Innovocracy.org
Innovocracy, a benefit corporation based in New York State, is a social funding platform created to rapidly commercialize innovation coming out of academic research. Innovocracy is building a network of leading research universities, as well as of individuals with an interest in sponsoring commercializable research, in order to efficiently identify and fund critical proof-of-concept activities and take the first steps toward building companies around university-based innovations. Most of the products and services supported by Innovocracy create social benefit for society, such as those related to healthcare, sustainability, education and extreme affordability. Innovocracy’s social funding site at http://www.innovocracy.org helps inventors raise money from donors with a personal or professional interest in the social benefits of those inventions. All the funds raised, except third-party credit card fees, go directly to the innovator while conforming to the unique requirements of each member university. In addition, Innovocracy offers to work with select innovators to facilitate the creation of startups to commercialize their research. Learn more at Innovocracy.org.

Link to this on PRWeb: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2012/8/prweb9783501.htm

What Is ‘Social Funding’?

The Nature of Social Funding

Here at Innovocracy we’ve been closely watching the evolution of crowdfunding as we’ve evolved our platform and network. Initially, inspired by Kickstarter, we simply saw an application for this new donor-funding model in academic research. As we began working with universities and innovators in higher education, our perception of the entire process and our business model have moved from a specialized funding platform to the realization that we are building a unique network, a network created to intensify the commercialization of campus research. As a result, we increasingly find that the term ‘crowdfunding’ only covers a single aspect of what we’re working on.

Networks Are Social

Each university or university system is a vast network comprised of students, graduate students, faculty, researchers, administrators, alumni and peers around the globe. Add in financial supporters and the citizens of the area(s) where the university is located and you have an extensive network of people, from all walks of life, with common connections.
The Innovocracy Network takes this already enormous group of connected people and multiplies it each time we add a university to our membership. This means that the addressable market for any Innovator seeking to raise funding via our website is potentially in the millions without even going outside of the academic universe. Add in the friends and family, co-workers and neighbors of anyone using the system and you are potentially tapping into vast resources, even if individual donations are tiny ($5, $1? $1000? All are welcome.)
Just as social networks like Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn have leveraged these social connections, Innovocracy is also seeking to be a central social funding platform. But that is just one piece of why we prefer the term ‘social funding’.

Social = Beneficial To Society

The types of Projects we support are those that combine commercial potential with a benefit to society. Even with just a few completed Projects under our belt we’re seeing solutions for parents with autistic children, for people who’ve lost the use of a limb and people with vision problems. And we have projects related to energy, green technology and environmental issues in the wings. These are inherently social innovations.

Donors Donate Because of Social Connections To A Project

Social funding is predicated on the concept that we are willing donate money to support a cause with a personal or social connection to our lives, without an immediate benefit to ourselves. All of the projects mentioned above have avid constituencies of potential supporters who contribute for the better good. Innovocracy is working to tie these various social aspects of both our funding model and our network to make it easy for donors to make a difference, for innovators to get to the next level and for our university partners to accelerate the pace of invention coming out of their research programs.
That’s social funding as we define it.

Academic Crowdfunding: An Innovocracy White Paper

[Note: This is the entire version of a white paper previously only available via download. To receive the downloadable PDF visit this page]

Overview

This white paper covers how crowdfunding is an opportunity and challenge for academic research institutions. Issues such as intellectual property, proper use of university resources, and tech transfer policy guidelines need to be addressed. Most crowdfunding platforms are not designed to accommodate the special needs of research universities.

What is Crowdfunding?

Crowdfunding uses the Internet and other forms of digital communication, such as social media, to connect donors with individuals seeking financial support.

Project Donor Systems

Crowdfunding sites like Kickstarter (creative and design projects) and PetriDish (scientific research), among others, use a donation model where a project with a specific fundraising target is promoted on a website. There is usually a finite time period when donors may contribute. They are often charged only if the fundraising target is met by this deadline. Project owners are usually responsible for most of the promotional burden and often offer incentives for donating at various levels. In many cases, the crowdfunding site has become an opportunity for artists and innovators to pre-sell products like musical CDs, DVDs and gadgets. Crowdfunding for equity was recently passed into law and will be available after the SEC clarifies its regulatory framework by the end of this year. (This will be addressed further in the paper.)

Microloans

Other crowdfunding sites like Kiva.org use a microloan model, whereby a donor can loan a small amount of money to a microbusiness owner. These loans started in third-world countries where access to even tiny amounts of credit is limited for entrepreneurs. The movement has expanded globally and loans are now made in many countries, including the US. Loans are expected to be repaid and are often recycled into another project. The incentive is altruistic.

Innovocracy: Crowdfunding for Gap Funding

Innovocracy.org is a donor system website, similar to those mentioned above, with critical features to address the specific challenges associated with funding innovation within a research university. We partner with top universities and work with them to ensure that the necessary steps are followed when their faculty, students and researchers post projects:

  • Clear commercialization objectives. Innovocracy’s mission is to help commercialize promising academic innovations. Thus, our project submission process focuses on helping innovators define a concrete time-scoped project that increases the likelihood for commercialization. While traditional funding sources often do not encourage further commercial pursuit, Innovocracy is specifically focused on this. Upon completion of the project, the innovation is expected to be much closer to being licensed or spun out into a startup. Our submission process helps the innovator think through a market lens, differently form a researcher seeking grant funding. This often leads to redefining the project in ways that will favor a successful outcome. Innovators whose projects are not accepted receive constructive feedback to increase the probability of future posting.
  • Protection of institutional brand image. With crowdfunding, universities need to determine how to leverage their “brand,” while protecting it. Unlike other crowdfunding platforms, Innovocracy provides a web page for each partnering university. All projects go through a formal curation process to maintain consistency of quality. Only projects that have been approved by the university are posted. Unlike other sites, we do not allow “rogue” researchers or students who may seek to post inappropriate projects and use the university name.
  • Clarification of intellectual property (IP). Intellectual property considerations are important for innovators who are seeking commercialization opportunities. Innovocracy works with a designated technology transfer officer at each university to ensure that appropriate provisional or other patent filings have been completed and that no current licensing discussions are compromised. At the outset of the relationship, Innovocracy develops a process and reporting system in conjunction with the university that satisfies the institution’s needs and adheres to its policies.
  • Standardization of fund flows. Innovocracy uses two mechanisms to deliver the funds raised through our website. In the research funding model, we work directly with the university department responsible for research funding administration. Upon a successful funding, we provide an award letter with a budget that had been previously approved. The funds are transferred into an academic research account from which the researcher can make withdrawals, ensuring that the funds are spent appropriately. At the conclusion of the project, the researcher prepares a one-page summary of the results, which Innovocracy forwards to the financial sponsors. With the gift funding model, the funds are forwarded to the development office. A similar process to the research funding model is followed thereafter.
  • Integration with accounting and over-head allocation processes. Innovocracy bridges the gap between classic research funding and funding to take a potential product to prototype or proof concept. The amounts in question generally range from $3,000-$15,000, although more may be raised. At these levels, ensuring that virtually all of this funding is used for the project is a critical element of the model. As a result, institutions generally waive their over-head allocation as long as the institution-wide over-head rates are not impacted.
  • Tax deductibility. Innovocracy’s intermediary role in the fundraising process, allows the sponsors to obtain a tax deduction since the funds are transferred directly to the university. We have worked closely with our university partners to assure full compliance and reporting.
  • Support of downstream commercialization objectives. Innovocracy provides additional support programs to selected teams requesting them. This may include introductions to manufacturing partners, venture capital firms, as well as potential customers. Presently, these services are offered ad hoc and there is no requirement to partake.

Designed For The Unique Requirements of the Research University Environment

Innovocracy’s model was designed for research university environment. Meanwhile, researchers have become aware of crowdfunding and some have been attracted to unaffiliated sites. When a researcher, working in a campus facility or on a project that has a connection to research funding through the university, decides to “go it alone” and raise money through a crowdfunding platform, serious problems may arise. The inventor may be violating agreements with the university, facilities funded for other purposes may be used inappropriately, intellectual property may be compromised, and there may be issues about correct use of funds. Our model provides an open, transparent platform that works for the researcher and the university.

Getting Products to Market: Technology Transfer and Crowdfunding

Because the funds raised through Innovocracy are used with commercialization in mind, the outcome of a successful project is often a prototype that moves the concept closer to marketability. The identification and development of businesses and licensing opportunities around these products is the goal of university technology transfer departments. Innovocracy enables this process by encouraging inventors to self-identify, articulate their projects, request funding and, then, use that funding to bring that product closer to a marketable state.

Gaining Early Traction

When a project is funded on a crowdfunding site, more is accomplished than the basic raising of money. A highly motivated early adopter constituency may form. It is a group that could provide an initial market assessment and create what is often referred to as “traction in the market.” This may increase the perceived value of the product to potential partners and investors, increasing the probability of successful commercialization. Even at an early stage in Innovocracy’s development we see this traction forming for our projects. While it is too early to judge whether this can be expected, we have seen that public access to information about new products coming out of academia does increase the likelihood of accelerating the tech transfer process.

Raising Equity With Crowdfunding

With the recent passage of the JOBS Act, restrictions on the ability of startups to raise equity from the public were loosened significantly. Crowdfunding sites are being organized to facilitate raising equity (up to $1 million) from small investors. While it is too early to determine the value of this movement — the Act is subject to the SEC producing regulatory guidelines by 2013 — it is a development that can have an impact upon university innovations. It would seem to be a natural progression from donor-based funding for product development to seed or start-up funding via crowdfunding for equity. This could complete a financial loop and close a gap that is often difficult to overcome for campus entrepreneurs and inventors.

Summation

Crowdfunding is a rapidly evolving and growing movement. Crowdfunding in a university environment, however, has complexities that put the university at risk. Innovocracy reduces this risk by working closely with universities to ensure that funds reach inventors while satisfying the requirements of the institution. If deployed correctly, crowdfunding may be ideally suited to address the needs of university technology transfer programs. It offers access to modest amounts of capital, potentially mitigating the gap funding problem, and exposes commercially promising opportunities to the marketplace.

Basing a Crowdfunding Start-up on an Assumption

Today Pando Daily, a tech news blog, has written that it appears that the SEC will not will not complete a regulatory framework for the JOBS Act until 2014 at the earliest. This Act, among other things, clears the way for crowdfunding to be used by companies to raise equity from individual investors who are not accredited, up to a million dollars. However it is subject to SEC review which was expected in early 2013.

(Note: I’m taking this with a grain of salt until I see it confirmed by a more reliable news source)

Though Innovocracy is not built on the assumption that this would take place (we’re really about commercialization of products in academia, typically prior to company formation), we are seeing many crowdfunding start-ups appearing whose business plans are based on SEC review of the Act. A big delay like this would likely be catastrophic for them as a two year or more delay in the early life of a start-up is an eternity.

My observation here is that crowdfunding is only a means. The end game is the value we offer to Innovators, our university partners and those who monetarily support our Projects. In our case this includes membership in an expanding network created to streamline funding while ensuring that the funds go to the Innovator efficiently and that the universities retain benefit from that Innovation. We are also increasingly seeing Innovocracy as a platform for helping successful Projects move on to the next step, whether that is business formation or partnerships for commercialization. Perhaps most important, we focus on Innovation that materially improves lives whether it is medical devices, energy efficiency projects or technology easily utilized in impoverished areas, among other things.

Would we utilize Innovocracy as an equity-raising site, given SEC finalization? It’s possible but that is not integral to our business model.

Is My Project A Good Match For Innovocracy?


In earlier posts, we touched on the curation process Innovocracy employs, project crowdfunding in a university environment, and gave an example of how student entrepreneurs can use Innovocracy to raise funds to continue the build out of a functional prototype. In this post we build upon that background and directly address the question we are most often asked by researchers: is my project right for the Innovocracy platform?This question is an understandable one given the ubiquity and vagueness surrounding crowdfunding “success stories” we see daily in the news, which makes platforms like Innovocracy sound applicable to nearly any type of researcher’s project.

We look for projects that demonstrate an ability to improve the health and well being of a group of people or the planet. If a project aims to make advancements within healthcare, clean energy, sustainability, education, extreme affordability or similar areas and has an end-user application in sight, the innovator should strongly consider submitting their project to Innovocracy. Such examples include Developing a Toilet-Training Method Using a Moisture Pager for Children with Autism, Enabling Stroke Survivors, Amputees and Others with Use of Only One Arm to Cycle, and, in the near future, a technology used to capture and store energy from ocean waves.

Projects dominated by theory fall outside the scope of Innovocracy as it stands today. Needless to say, for epistemic reasons we appreciate interesting theorems, when a novel flavor of logic pops into existence and challenges the status quo, or when a set of hypotheses consistently return false experiment after experiment. Those and other forms of intellectual discovery are considered the core of academic discussion, so our current lack of attention for them here should not understate their importance.

In general, we try to remain cognizant of the fact that it often takes more than generating a proof or disproving a hypothesis to improve the health and well being of a group of people or the planet. As we continue to iterate with our launch partners, it will become easier and easier for researchers to raise a modest amount of money to explore an innovative concept through the development of a functional prototype.

Crowdfunding News: June 11-17, 2012

Crowdfunding is a super hot topic right now so we’re going to highlight a few news items each week that we’ve found interesting. Because things are evolving almost daily with new concepts and sites appearing and pundits weighing in, this weekly column is not ‘state of the art’, it is closer to social anthropology, i.e. we’re engaged observers and participants watching an emerging phenomena:

Weighing In On The JOBS Act:

The Economist takes a look at equity crowdfunding- a view from across the pond.

 Innovocracy News:

MonoMano, an Innovocracy-funded company, demonstrates their single handed control device enabling those with the use of only one arm to ride a recumbent bike.

General Crowdfunding News:

Crowdfunding or CommunityFunding, a white paper from yet another site trying to differentiate their model from the crowd. However, the community concept is pretty important- we tap into large communities centered around universities including students, alumni, parents, faculty and administration.

Clayton Christensen, author of The Innovator’s Dilemma on why he invested in crowdfunding site CircleUp. Their focus is equity investing in consumer and retail startups.

 News For Project Owners

Sir James Dyson on why failure is a desirable trait.