USC And Techstars Partnering On Accelerating Opportunities For Students, Faculty, And Alumni

By Amit Chowdhry • Feb 29, 2024

The University of Southern California and Techstars will work together on accelerating opportunities for USC-affiliated entrepreneurs, including students, faculty and alumni. And USC will spark new startups and innovation under a new collaboration with Techstars, a leading pre-seed investor.

The collaboration also promises for the local economy as ideas generated at USC are converted into products and businesses that will enhance the university’s economic footprint at Silicon Beach. And the budding tech corridor spans Los Angeles County and portions of Orange County, and it hosts several tech and biotech industry leaders, including the USC Information Sciences Institute in Marina del Rey and the USC Institute for Creative Technologies in Los Angeles.

USC is one of the largest private employers in the L.A. economy. With nearly 4,800 faculty and 47,000 students, it also features a significant brain trust with the potential to solve significant challenges such as treatment of health issues by translating research into biomedical devices, drug therapies, tech devices and software, and other product development.

Techstars will introduce USC faculty, students, and alumni to the business of startup formation by assisting at the pre-seed stage through a two-pronged approach — one focused on education and networking and the other on business acceleration.

The USC and Techstars Digital Economy Accelerator will invest in selected USC-affiliated companies, empowering founders and facilitating startups’ growth through support, education, access to its global network of partners, and fundraising opportunities. The University Catalyst pre-accelerator program will provide training and support for USC students, faculty, and alumni interested in starting their own companies. Techstars’ support and programming will bolster USC entrepreneurs’ efforts to move their intellectual property from concept to market.

The Techstars collaboration is another major development in the USC Frontiers of Computing moonshot. Announced by USC President Carol Folt in May, the $1 billion-plus investment has been advancing and expanding computing research and education across the university strategically and thoughtfully to transform USC’s future.

The Techstars programs will enable USC to expand its footprint in the Silicon Beach corridor that is home to over 500 tech companies and startups, including Google, Amazon, SpaceX, and others. And the cornerstones of USC’s Silicon Beach Campus are its two computing-centric institutes affiliated with the USC Viterbi School of Engineering: the Information Sciences Institute in Marina del Rey and the Institute for Creative Technologies in Playa Vista. Powerhouses in their respective fields, these institutes made groundbreaking discoveries such as the Domain Name System (commonly known as DNS, and why web addresses end in .com, .edu, .net) and the technology underlying the Oculus Rift, among many others.

USC is also a major leader in quantum computing, which promises to transform cybersecurity, material discovery, fintech and drug discovery. In 2011, USC became the first university to host and operate a commercial quantum computing system, the USC Quantum Computing Center in Silicon Beach, which houses a D-Wave quantum computer.

Through Techstars, the university is fostering an even friendlier climate for entrepreneurship across the university. Researchers at the USC Michelson Center for Convergent Bioscience are investigating some of the greatest health challenges we face.

The center – which brings together collaborators across the sciences – was founded with a gift by renowned inventor and surgeon Gary Michelson and his wife Alya Michelson to develop new drug therapies and devices as solutions for health issues ranging from cancer to blindness. And Steve Kay, who directs the center, said the agreement with Techstars will help eliminate obstacles to commercialization.

Ellis Meng, vice dean of technology innovation and entrepreneurship and professor at USC Viterbi, develops novel micro- and nanotechnologies for biomedical applications that have been spun off into two companies. And Mark Humayun, director of the USC Dr. Allen and Charlotte Ginsburg Institute for Biomedical Therapeutics, received international attention for developing a stem cell-based implant that has shown promise in preliminary clinical trials in reversing macular degeneration.

Through this new agreement, USC faculty, researchers, students and alumni developing the next generation of potentially life-changing technologies can access the resources of the Techstars network to transform their ideas from concept to product and to network with startups and venture capitalists in the Silicon Beach area. This new partnership will reinforce the work of the USC Stevens Center for Innovation, the university’s technology licensing office. Headed by executive director Erin Overstreet, the center was established by a gift from USC Viterbi alumnus and USC Board of Trustees member Mark Stevens to support entrepreneurship at the university and the commercialization of USC IP.

The USC Stevens Center will be streamlining the IP commercialization process to match the robust support and faster development time of the Techstars accelerator program. And twelve USC-affiliated companies will be selected each year to participate in the USC and Techstars Digital Economy Accelerator.

KEY QUOTES:

“Our mission is to foster an ecosystem that thrives on innovative thinking, groundbreaking translational research and multidisciplinary collaborations that drive meaningful impact. This new partnership with Techstars is certain to inspire growth in the Southern California innovation ecosystem and fortify the fast-growing tech corridor that stretches from Santa Barbara through L.A. to San Diego. We look forward to building an entrepreneurship accelerator that produces even more student, faculty and alumni startups.”

– Ishwar Puri, USC’s senior vice president of research and innovation

“It is critical that we uplift and empower inventors and founders across all idea development stages. Together with USC, we will be able to provide the ambitious and innovative thinkers within the Trojan community with the tools needed for impactful success.”

– Shirley Romig, chief accelerator investment officer at Techstars

“The new partnership between USC and Techstars forms an important component of building an innovation ecosystem that supports our emerging entrepreneurs. Partnerships such as these can lower the barrier to entry for faculty and students considering creating a startup company founded upon USC IP. Early-stage support is critical to our success in this arena.”

– Steve Kay, a University Professor and director of convergent biosciences at USC Michelson Center

“We’re very excited for this new partnership with Techstars that will help us form partnerships in the Los Angeles area. It will enhance innovation in Los Angeles by investing in companies that utilize USC research and talent, and Techstars will give the USC community the required resources to successfully launch business ideas.”

– Steven Moldin, USC interim associate vice president of research strategy and innovation

“Our partnership with Techstars is a strategic step toward realizing an even greater impact on the Southern California innovation ecosystem. It catalyzes product-oriented research and entrepreneurial ventures among our faculty and students and fulfills a critical need for the USC community. We’re excited about the unique opportunities this collaboration presents.”

– Executive director Erin Overstreet