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MIT's E-Club Fosters
New Businesses
October 6, 2011
At
a recent meeting of the 23-year-old MIT Entrepreneurs Club, one recent
graduate of the Sloan School of Management described his plans for a
business — one based on his solution to a little-recognized problem that
currently costs airlines $10 billion a year. Another alumnus, an
engineer who recently retired after a career in the telecom business,
talked about his patented approach to fighting wildfires in remote
locations. A new MIT graduate student, who just earned his undergraduate
degree from the Institute this spring, spoke of three different startup
businesses he’s currently cultivating in his spare time — one of which
he co-founded during his freshman year at the Institute.
In short, just another typical week at the E-Club.
The E-Club is just one of a variety of organizations at MIT dedicated to
fostering new businesses based on ideas that emerge from classrooms,
labs and late-night brainstorming sessions. And that’s on top of the
many competitions and dozens of venture-oriented classes, services and
centers dedicated to helping members of the MIT community turn their
ideas into viable businesses.
The results of all this entrepreneurial ferment are staggering: MIT
alumni and faculty start more than 200 new companies every year,
according to the MIT Venture Mentoring Service; as a group, they’ve
founded thousands of companies ranging from huge, well-known firms such
as Hewlett-Packard, Bose and Intel, to rising companies including A123
Systems, Zipcar and Dropbox. Collectively, these firms have created
millions of jobs. They also generate about $2 trillion a year in
revenues, according to a 2009 study.
“It’s in the DNA,” says William Aulet, senior lecturer in MIT’s Sloan
School and director of the MIT Entrepreneurship Center, which aims to
help students develop the skills they’ll need to start companies. From
the time of its founding, he says, MIT’s “mens et manus” (“mind and
hand”) philosophy of hands-on education has always fostered the kind of
roll-up-your-sleeves attitude essential for an entrepreneur.
Sowing the seeds
MIT also has a long tradition of multidisciplinary collaborations, Aulet
says, and the close physical proximity and ease of cross-registration in
different schools — for example, engineering students taking business
classes — help foster the kinds of collaborations that often lead to a
strong founding team for a new business.
“The physical layout really promotes cross-campus collaborations,” he
says. He cites as an example the new location of the Entrepreneurship
Center — where students can meet and plan during the formative stages of
their new ventures — which is midway between Sloan and the Media Lab.
MIT has “a very pragmatic culture,” says Leon Sandler, executive
director of MIT’s Deshpande Center for Technological Innovations. “It’s
very much about solving problems, engineering solutions to things.”
More than 100 representatives of other universities have asked Sandler
to explain MIT’s secret to success, he says. “We’re not striving to be
unique,” he says, and yet, “we’re able to commercialize an amazing
amount of technology, by whatever metric you choose.”
“I talk to people at other universities that have a similar size of
research budget, and they might spin out one company a year,” Sandler
adds. By contrast, MIT’s Technology Licensing Office — which
commercializes technology for which the Institute has obtained patents —
licenses new technologies to companies about once every two weeks.
Students have ample opportunities to learn about these past success
stories. Just last weekend, the second annual “Startup Bootcamp”
featured 10 leaders of successful startups, some of which came out of
MIT. A week earlier, a new three-day workshop called “t=0” was held on
campus, providing a hands-on opportunity for students to form teams and
brainstorm new business ideas with the help of successful
alumni-entrepreneurs including Mitch Kapor GM ’81, the founder of Lotus
Development (now part of IBM).
And the resources available to would-be entrepreneurs don’t stop at
graduation: One of the oldest organizations aimed at fostering
entrepreneurship is the alumni-founded and led MIT Enterprise Forum,
started in 1978, which now has 28 branches around the world that hold
workshops and networking events.
From the ground up
But while the hands-on educational approach and a history of successful
launches is now ingrained in the Institute’s culture, it wasn’t always
recognized and fostered to the degree it is now, says Joost Bonsen ’90,
SM ’06. For example, the student-run $100K Business Plan Competition
started in 1989 as a $10K contest, which Bonsen managed from 1993 to
1995. It was a harder sell then, he explains, because “we didn’t have
any success stories yet, and there wasn’t this visibility for
entrepreneurship” that exists today.
Now, the contest can boast having helped launch more than a dozen
companies that have grown to values of more than $100 million, and at
least two that are now worth greater than $1 billion.
Helping to provide the mentorship, advice and resources students need to
launch a company is “what we’re all about,” says Kourosh Kaghazian, a
Sloan MBA student and executive director of this year’s $100K
Competition. The three-part competition, he says, “encourages students
who might have an idea, a technology that might be commercialized, to
find out, ‘How do you go about thinking this thing through?’”
A big part of the contest’s success, Kaghazian says, lies in the
resources and connections it provides: Students are paired with mentors,
usually venture capitalists or established entrepreneurs, who can
provide guidance in the early stages of figuring out a plan, helping
them “get ready to go out into the real world.”
Mechanical engineering graduate student Josh Siegel ’11, president of
the MIT Entrepreneurs Club, agrees that a key element to Institute-wide
success in creating companies is the relationships people build through
both classes and the many clubs and competitions devoted to
entrepreneurship. In his club, for example, Siegel says the emphasis is
on hearing from people in the midst of grappling with the financial,
organizational, interpersonal and legal issues involved in getting a
company up and running.
“We give you the nitty-gritty,” he says. “It’s a club for people who are
very hands-on, who want to do it themselves, make mistakes, and keep
struggling until they succeed. We turn away people who are looking for a
get-rich-quick scheme.”
When cars fly
But
for those with real ideas, these clubs can make all the difference.
Richard Shyduroff, who co-founded the Entrepreneurs Club in 1988 and
teaches a seminar on Technology Startups, cites one example from recent
years: A student from the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics
came to the club and pitched a crazy-sounding idea centered around a
flying car, or road-worthy airplane.
But by the next day, Shyduroff had talked to another alumnus and E-Club
regular who ended up providing seed funding. That idea has now become a
company called Terrafugia, which has raised millions of dollars in
funding, has dozens of advance orders, and just received National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration approval for its vehicles.
“Those are the kinds of meetings we live for,” Shyduroff says proudly. |