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How IISc is using its knowledge to incubate core tech products with a societal impact

The Economic Times | J Vignesh | 20 April 2018 |

Fathima Benazir and Alex Paul used to be friends at school in Ooty, but then lost touch. Benazir studied biochemistry, while Paul took the engineering route to become director of IT service management at Zoho, where he spent close to 13 years. When they eventually reconnected over calls, both were ready to try something new. Paul was getting bored in Australia and wanted to come back to India. Benazir was keen on exploring further afield in molecular biology. Those conversations led to Azooka Life Sciences and eventually an organic stain product called Tinto-Rang. Critical to this process was the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), which acted as incubator and has been doing so for several startups over the past few years. The institute has once again retained the No. 1 spot in the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF). IISc is unlike most incubators, devoid of much of the glitz thats usually associated with the space. That may be one of the reasons for its record. Getting into IISc is difficult, a lot of interviews and panels… where the panel is not judging how much money each startup is going make, but eventually, how many lives are you going to impact, said Paul. In terms of incubators, it may not be fancy looking… but it is definitely a house of knowledge. It helped that Benazir was an alumna. From giving the duo space to helping with various facets of the product, IISc STEM Cell incubator has helped the startup grow. Azooka is currently engaged in field trials of its product, which is used in molecular diagnosis but is safe enough to be ingested, unlike most of the other products that are used in such research. IISc, the highest-ranked institute for higher education in the country in most global league tables, has long been known for its research. It been making a concentrated effort to translate that knowledge into real-world impact. While there have been startups on campus since the early 2000s, the initiative has picked up momentum since 2014.

The institute has put in place policies to support startups that have science and technology at its core, by alumni, faculty or others as long as there is a societal impact. Startups can also license intellectual property from IISc. Currently under incubation, which typically lasts three years, are ideas in domains such as space, healthcare, agriculture and biotechnology. STEM Cell takes 4-10% equity in such enterprises. As you know, IISc has been a research led institution… therefore, the focus has been on research and publishing papers in conferences. Not much thought was given to its relevance to society. You may become the top-ranked institute, but to the common man, it will be like, so what? said CS Murali, chairman, STEM Cell, explaining the philosophy behind the push. Untitled-6 Murali, an IISc alumnus who worked at Tata Consultancy Services , IBM and Cognizant, said the thought of giving something back occurred to him during the school centenary celebrations in 2008: Hundred years is a great number, but what can we do for IISc? He and a few of his friends started mentoring startups at IISc informally that year. After retiring from Cognizant in 2012, Murali got into it full time. The earliest ventures from IISc included bioinformatics company Strand Life Sciences and the handheld Simputer. Around 2001-02, the first wave happened… Strand Life Sciences, Simputer… that helped us understand what it was. Not all of them succeeded–Strand is an exception, said Bala Gurumoorthy, chief executive of IISc Society for Innovation and Development (SID). The second wave happened around 2008, when Murali and others came on board. In the last three-four years, it has seen an uptick. It probable that this is a reflection of the change in the country as well, he said, referring to the startup explosion in the last 10 years that created companies like Flipkart. SID, which was established in 1997 as a research and development bridge between industry and IISc, also supports entrepreneurship. The early engagements with startups did not have much support from the institute but that changed. Faculty members can be promoters or technical advisors and can hold equity. The policy, which came into being five years ago, allows them to spend one day a week in activities related to the company. They can take sabbaticals as well, allowing them to engage with startups full time. Every IISc-incubated startup gets a faculty mentor who a sector expert. For Rohan Ganapathy and Yashas Karanam, IISc has been an invaluable partner. The cofounders of Bellatrix Aerospace , both in their mid-20s and neither of them alumni of IISc, are building an electric propulsion system for satellites designed to use water as fuel. They were previously based in Coimbatore but were challenged by a lack of test facilities and expert advice. Coming here, we have been able to scale things up faster, said Karanam. We are working with several departments and working with professors, using a lot of lab facilities available at IISc–this is the greatest plus point. No other incubator would have helped in getting such a big space. We have got a 1,000-square feet lab space dedicated for us. Bellatrix is the only startup that the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is working with, having ordered its system for satellite missions. Azooka similarly works with various departments in IISc to finetune various aspects. Within three years, IISc has helped us collaborate with the centre for nanoscience, we work with biochemistry, we take advice of molecular biophysics that helps us with structure, for liquid handling we take advice from the device instrumentation and control department, said Paul. Being able to access high-tech labs means costs can be reined in. If you want to use, say, scanning electron microscopy for some sample, you can go to a lab that offers this facility. You can get it done rather than thinking where to get this one crore or two crore worth equipment, said Navakanta Bhat, professor in the Department of Electrical Communication Engineering and cofounder of Pathshodh, which makes portable diagnostics devices. There are departments which also offer facilities to startups with special consideration, with discounted pricing. It is a big boon. The Tata Trusts are using Pathshodh device for its rural healthcare programme. Bhat has taken a sabbatical to work on Pathshodh. About 350 kilometres away, the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras has been consistently successful in nurturing intellectual property-led startups for decades. About 140 startups have been a part of the IIT-M Incubation Cell.

IISc has nurtured about 28 startups, with more than half of them starting up since 2014. The aspiration is to bump up that number. Murali said about 8% of faculty members are involved in some startup activity or the other. While this is seen as an improvement from before, funding is a challenge. Money comes by way of grants and the corporate social responsibility (CSR) budgets of corporates. One main challenge our startups have faced is raising money, said Murali. Some of them have managed to raise a decent amount from grants. When we brought in investors, they looked at these companies, liked them but said it is too early for us. Siana Capital Management–led by technology outsourcing advisor Siddarth Pai and former managing director and chief executive officer of IL&FS private equity Archana Hingorani–wants to raise up to $100 million to help academic ventures get funding, ET recently reported. Siana Capital struck an agreement with IISc recently that enables it to review startups and gives it the first right to provide seed funding. The pipeline is looking healthy, said Gurumoorthy, with April having seen more than 20 applications thus far. IISc is working on building a network of alumni mentors to help companies. IISc has done this in the past, said Narayanan Ramaswamy, partner and head of education, KPMG (India). They have not done it like an incubation centre, the way they are doing it now. It is a timetested concept, and it is good that somebody like IISc, who represent research in India in very many ways, particularly, the basic sciences area it is good that they are coming up with this. One big success story could help pave the way for more. We have companies that will make a mark, said Gurumoorthy. But it is like making a movie–will we get a super hit? We (have to) wait. We will keep our fingers crossed. – Courtesy

Mangalore to be declared India’s first startup district

Representational Image

The move will give a push to young minds in the tier-II city which is a known educational hub. It will also help spread the startup culture to more areas and at the same time use technology innovatively to help address issues that have a larger impact.

Mangalore will soon be declared the country’s first startup district to give a push to the vibrant student community and turn them into startup entrepreneurs. As a first step, the Centre has decided to locate incubators at two reputed institutes in the region under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.  The incubators, under the Startup India programme flagged off last year, will be located at the National Institute of Technology, Surathkal, a premier engineering college in the coastal district and NMAM Institute of Technology, an engineering college under Nitte University. The government wants to encourage startups to provide innovative solutions for challenges unique to India. This means they will be encouraged to do more than just develop apps. The students-turned-startup-entrepreneurs will get an opportunity to come up with innovative solutions in health, education, agriculture, and infrastructure as these sectors will have a pan-India resonance.

Startup district tag soon

Union Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has indicated that in the next few weeks, Mangalore will be officially declared India’s first startup district enabling students to take a step into entrepreneurship.

The incubator is set to encourage ideas that require technological intervention. Soon, these labs will become a source of inspiration for startups across the country as StartupIndia, a central government fund for startups, is set to fund more eligible companies the next financial year.

NITK was formerly known as Karnataka Regional Engineering College and is a state-run institute that has produced fine talent from its inception in 1960. NMAM is a private sector institution under the Nitte group of institutions, which is an autonomous university.  “With this, all startups in Mangalore can converge into one place. They can be incubated here and Startup India funds will also be available to those with out-of-the-box ideas that create maximum impact,” a ministry source told YourStory. “The union minister, who is also a Rajya Sabha member from Karnataka, is keen to turn Mangalore, a cosmopolitan city with thousands of engineering students in the vicinity, a startup district. She has chosen two of the oldest institutions in the region to start these centres,” the source added.

State-of-the-art

These two institutes were selected as they boast of state-of-the-art facilities and the students and infrastructure required for the startup culture to thrive. NMAMIT is already running a New Age Incubation Centre as part of nine engineering colleges selected by the Karnataka Biotechnology and Information Technology Services, an organisation under the state Department of IT and BT. It runs a programme called Karnataka New Age Incubation Network. The coastal city also boasts of excellent air, road, rail, and sea connectivity. It also has made a name for itself for having several well-known professional colleges which attract students from across the country and abroad.

The ministry has estimated that in three years’ time, it can increase the number of incubation centres along with the support of the state government and NASSCOM which have robustly supported such programmes with both policies and infrastructure in Bengaluru, which is also known for being India’s first startup city.

Moving away

Bengaluru currently has a heavy concentration of incubators and accelerators with the Karnataka government, central government, NASSCOM, venture capital firms, as well as MNCs offering seats. The government has already indicated that it would like to spread out such activity to tier-II cities such as Mangalore and boost entrepreneurship. The Karnataka government has also given entrepreneurial activity a boost with a startup fund, a first in the country again, which envisages support as well as funds up to Rs 50 lakh per startup. “It’s a no- questions-asked fund and these companies also do not have to sit in designated incubation centres to be eligible,” says Karnataka IT and BT minister Priyank Kharge.  In a first, eight startups in the tourism sector received anywhere between Rs 5-50 lakh, amounting to a total of Rs 1.9 crore, for coming up with products to help the tourism department showcase itself.  “There are some more companies in different sectors that have been chosen and their names will be announced soon,” Priyank said. It is not just in sectors that are hot; there are a few startups in the process of being selected in the agricultural sector too, Karnataka Agriculture Minister Krishna Byre Gowda told YourStory. “We are looking at technological interventions in agriculture which can ease the stress on farmers. We are actively looking at the ideas and processing through the IT department.” Earlier efforts to start IT centres in Mangalore were not very successful as there were several issues at the local level. Mangalore South MLA JR Lobo said there were issues with the urban development department and the city municipal corporation.  “Every time an IT company proposes a shift to the tier-II city or an NRI comes up with an idea of giving back to their home town, these projects are welcomed with great fanfare but are never sanctioned as per their original plans. As a result, they are stuck due to bureaucratic hurdles,” he said. To address these problems specific to the industry, the lawmaker, who is keen to promote the district, has called all stakeholders on to a common platform next month.

Catch them young

Meanwhile, the Centre’s decision is set to provide a boost to the educated youth of the region and provide them with a chance to think big and come out with several ideas. At a recent meeting in Chennai, representatives of both colleges met up with Sitharaman and NITI Aayog CEO, Amitabh Kant. This initiative under Make in India and Startup India will go a long way. The thought is that these innovation centres will be on the lines of IIT, Madras, and will be started in May-June by when students are expected to graduate and grab a chance at starting their own businesses, a college representative said. Lobo said designating Mangalore as a startup district was a good step as the region was the cradle for successful entrepreneurs who went on to make a name both in India and abroad in banking, hotel, health and other industry. “With government support, we can turn Mangalore into a vibrant startup district which also help the tier II city grow,” Priyank added. – Courtesy

3,000 students of Vidyavihar college take internal tests on smartphones

The Times of India | Yogita Rao | TNN |  Mar 15, 2017  |

MUMBAI: After laptops, a city college is now using mobile phones for the benefit of students. Over 3,000 students of K J Somaiya College of Arts and Commerce recently took their internal tests on smartphones.  The college conducted 20-mark tests—multiple choice and true or false questions—for all classes with the help of a small device that can create its own network and can be connected to 100 smartphones in a classroom. After the success in one of its institutes, the Somaiya Trust now plans to use the technology in other colleges on its Vidyavihar campus in the coming session. It also plans to use it in teaching. The device, Offee, was developed by an alumnus, Amit Shah, in the incubation centre of the group’s engineering college.  The students were asked to download an app from Offee network and then go offline. They had to then go to the website supported by the device and log in using their roll number and password. The questions are not in the same order for all students, eliminating the possibility of malpractices.

Riddhi Chheda, a first-year B Com student, said her class has given three tests in accountancy, economics and commerce. “We did not face any network-related issued. It was a wonderful experience and took very little time,” said Chheda. “It’s almost like playing an educational game on the mobile,” said another student.   The provost of Somaiya Vidyavihar, Rajan Welukar, said, “This was almost like a pilot project. Teachers got to know about the results instantaneously. They could also keep track of the pace at which students were answering questions. We are planning to make use of the technology in the teaching process too. We may extend it to other forms of exams, too, in future. It can help teachers to pace their teaching according to the needs of the children.”  Shah, who developed Offee, said it is actually a test conducted in offline mode. “The device has in store the questions created by faculty members. Any form of information can be uploaded onto the device and then downloaded on students’ smartphones when it is connected and used whenever required,” he said. He has now collaborated with a tech firm to reach out to a wider audience.  While using technology for tests is not new, very few colleges are making use of online platforms as they have to follow a testing pattern prescribed by Mumbai University. St Xavier’s and DG Ruparel colleges have made use of online platforms like Moodle to conduct test online. St Xavier’s even allows submission of projects online and assesses them using an anti-plagiarism software, said principal Agnelo Menezes. –  Courtesy