Do spin-offs make the academics’ head spin?
Do spin-offs make the academics’ head spin?
As public research organisations are increasingly driven by their national and regional governments to engage in knowledge transfer, they have started to support the creation of companies. These research based spin-off companies (RBSOs) often keep contacts with the research institutes they originate from. In this paper we present the results of a study of four research institutes within two universities and two non-university public research organisations (PROs) in the Netherlands. We show that research organisations have distinct motivations to support the creation of spin-off companies. In terms of resources RBSOs contribute, mostly in a modest way, to research activities by providing information, equipment and monetary resources. In particular, RBSOs are helpful for researchers competing for research grants that demand participation of industry. Furthermore, RBSOs may be seen as a proactive response by Dutch public research organisations to demands of economic relevance from their institutional environment. RBSOs enhance the prestige of their parent organisations and create legitimacy for public funds invested in PROs. At the same time, most RBSOs do not have a significant impact on the direction of the research conducted at the PROs.
public research organisations (PROs), research based spin-off companies (RBSOs), science-industry interaction, industry funding, commercialisation, impacts on knowledge production
331-353
Zomer, Arend H.
6c6d3043-4312-496c-85ed-d8413035fe9b
Jongbloed, Ben W.A.
1c1d1b2f-d35f-483b-bdb9-e9bf6883bf02
Enders, Jürgen
cf0b34e3-15ef-430a-ae38-3c780d059a78
September 2010
Zomer, Arend H.
6c6d3043-4312-496c-85ed-d8413035fe9b
Jongbloed, Ben W.A.
1c1d1b2f-d35f-483b-bdb9-e9bf6883bf02
Enders, Jürgen
cf0b34e3-15ef-430a-ae38-3c780d059a78
Abstract
As public research organisations are increasingly driven by their national and regional governments to engage in knowledge transfer, they have started to support the creation of companies. These research based spin-off companies (RBSOs) often keep contacts with the research institutes they originate from. In this paper we present the results of a study of four research institutes within two universities and two non-university public research organisations (PROs) in the Netherlands. We show that research organisations have distinct motivations to support the creation of spin-off companies. In terms of resources RBSOs contribute, mostly in a modest way, to research activities by providing information, equipment and monetary resources. In particular, RBSOs are helpful for researchers competing for research grants that demand participation of industry. Furthermore, RBSOs may be seen as a proactive response by Dutch public research organisations to demands of economic relevance from their institutional environment. RBSOs enhance the prestige of their parent organisations and create legitimacy for public funds invested in PROs. At the same time, most RBSOs do not have a significant impact on the direction of the research conducted at the PROs.
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Published date: September 2010
Keywords:
public research organisations (PROs), research based spin-off companies (RBSOs), science-industry interaction, industry funding, commercialisation, impacts on knowledge production
Organisations:
Leadership School Improve &Effectiveness
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 352514
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/352514
ISSN: 0026-4695
PURE UUID: f101f646-9c9c-4f63-b44b-0aea7ec41654
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Date deposited: 15 May 2013 11:36
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:53
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Author:
Arend H. Zomer
Author:
Ben W.A. Jongbloed
Author:
Jürgen Enders
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