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Stephen McComb - Masterclass - Funding for Innovation in Life & Health Sciences
1. Masterclass
A guide to writing applications
for R&D Grant Funding
Stephen Mc Comb, KTN
@mccomb_sj
2.
3. Audience of the future / Next generation services (pioneer) / Quantum technology (pioneer)
Artificial intelligence and data economy
Clean growth
Energy revolution
Transforming
construction
Transforming
food production
Healthy ageing
Medicines manufacturing
Data to early diagnosis and
precision medicine
Healthy ageing
Future of mobility
Faraday battery challenge
Extreme robotics
National space test facility
Self-driving vehicles
Mfg & materials of the future
Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund
Industry-led and powered by multi-disciplinary
research and business academic collaboration
Develop UK industries that are fit for the future,
driving progress in technologies where the UK
can become a world-leader in research and
commercialisation
4. Types of funding products
1. Grants
2. Innovation Loans
3. SBRI
Assessing Suitability:
- Stage of R&D (close to commercialisation)
‒ Level of Government Contribution
‒ Stage of R&D (close to commercialisation)
‒ Single or Collaborative
‒ Loan or grant
‒ Duration
Projects must be business-led
5. Considering Eligibility Criteria
• Are You Eligible - Small/Micro, Medium or Large (EU definition), Research
Organisations, Public Sector Organisations doing research activity.
• Participation Rules - At least 70% of total eligible project costs must be incurred
by business. Focus on funding to Business.
• Collaboration – Business Led, Multiple Organisations and effective partnership.
• Scope – does your project align with the competition.
• Innovation – world leading science and business which drives growth.
We would expect to see projects that align with the challenge and with a structure and rationale
of the collaboration that makes business sense.
6. Searching for Innovate UK funding
opportunities
https://apply-for-
innovation-
funding.service.gov.uk/co
mpetition/search
10. Impact
- Write a sentence, fold it over,
then pass it on
Question:
What impact might glider buses
have on the City of Belfast?
This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY-SA
12. It’s an exam and a story …
- Answer the Question
- Tell a Story
- Convince Rather than Meet the Word Count
- High Scores in all Questions
13. Before you Start
A well told story about robots won’t win the romantic fiction awards.
Check that your scope aligns.
If in doubt, check with lead technologists at Innovate UK. Use the
competition help. They are helpful.
14. … First Impressions
Project Summary
Please provide a short summary of your project.
• This is the first thing they read - ‘wow!, I get this and I like this’.
• Top tip – ‘Economist’ editorial style. 9 word sentences, active tense.
15. 1. Need or challenge
What is the business need, citizen challenge, technological challenge or
market opportunity behind your innovation?
“Here’s an unmet business needs that is costing or denying (John/s)
value. We can develop the tech/service/product to fix this challenge and
when we do, (John/s) will buy it.”
• Depth about the wider context
• Insight on how you will solve it where others fail
17. 2. Approach and innovation
What approach will you take and where will the focus of the innovation
be?
“We will technically solve the challenge by x, y, z. This is better than
competitors a, b, c because … Based on earlier work (patent searches)
we have freedom to operate. We will deliver (this/these) outputs.”
• “and here’s a picture (Appendix Q2) that oozes ‘wow factor!’”
• A technical stretch is important – Not off the shelf
19. 3. Team and resources
Who is in the project team and what are their roles?
“Our team is the best - and here’s a list of credentials/track record that
shows we can build it and get traction in the market. We will additionally
need (these) resources and this is where we get them”.
• Do not be shy!
• Use the competition to expand your network
21. 4. Market awareness
What does the market you are targeting look like?
• The market looks like (this) and here’s the trends with numbers and
recent references that show we really know our stuff. Our target
addressable market is (sensible, conservative, argued) numbers).
23. 5. Outcomes and route to market
How are you going to grow your business and increase your productivity
into the long term as a result of the project?
“The value proposition to our target customers is (how they benefit in a
business sense and it’s worth x to them). Our routes to market are
(credible ideas, preferably relevant to market identified in Q4). Currently
we sit (here) in the market but this project will take us to (there).”
25. 6. Wider impacts
What impact might this project have outside the project team?
• “There are external (wider) benefits to
(economic/social/environmental/greater good stuff) attributable to this
solution being implemented and they are worth (some sort of
guestimate). Stress any regional impacts (local economy stuff).”
27. 7. Project management
How will you manage the project effectively?
“Here’s a fantastic project plan (work packages, costed, research
category, description of deliverables, management techniques and
structure”.
• “and here’s a Gantt chart (AppendixQ7)”.
• The plan lines up with all other comments and comitments made in
earlier sections.
29. 8. Risks
What are the main risks for this project?
“Here’s a thorough risk assessment
(project/technical/commercial/environmental/regulatory/whatever)
with risk ownership assigned and sensible mitigation suggested along
with a description of how risk will be managed during the project.”
• “and here’s a nice initial risk register (AppendixQ8).”
• Top tip – this is a ‘graph question’, label the axes.
31. 9. Additionality
Describe the impact that an injection of public funding would have
on this project.
“We seriously need support. It will not happen without it. Support
enables (faster time to market; derisking to the point where private
investors will come in; a new type of collaboration) – and look at those
awesome (stakeholder and/or wider) benefits.”
33. 10. Costs and value for money
How much will the project cost and how does it represent value for
money for the team and the taxpayer?
“It’s excellent value for money - look how modestly the work packages
are costed. Subcontracts are justified because (they’re the best/we
worked well with them previously/etc). The return to the tax payer
comes from (increased VAT/payroll taxes/improved
productivity/efficiency/contribution to govt strategy/etc).”
35. Summary
• Wow them from the off.
• Answer the questions.
• Use short, punchy sentences. Create a narrative flow.
• Bring Innovation
• Be Great not Good
37. Critique
As a group consider:
• What standard is the response?
• Does it leave a lasting impression?
• How would you improve or amend?
38. Thank you
Register for our updates:
www.ktn-uk.org
Original Presentation from @mairidillon
Notas do Editor
We have invested £2.2 billion to date
Matched with just over £1.5 billion from industry.
11,000 projects
8,000 organisations
70,000 jobs created
And a return on investment of up to £7.30 for every £1 invested.
This is public money and we take it very seriously, regularly analysing our portfolio for the impact achieved.
*Mention Wave 3 EOIs for further challenge programmes*
£1.7bn invested so far in the ISCF funding 14 challenge areas
This diagram shows how the innovations and technologies driven from the ISCF (loosely) fit with the GCs.
Spending target of R&D 2.3% GDP –
- Explain Grand Challenges
This funding is part of the government’s commitment to investing in innovative businesses. The aims are to make the UK the world’s most innovative nation by 2030 and raise UK research and development spend to 2.4% of GDP.
Competitive funding
Sector competitions £150M pa
ISCF challenge programmes >£2bn to be spent over the next 4-5 years
What is the motivation/need?
What is the current state of the art?
Describe work already done
Identify the wider challenges – Political, Economic, Social, Environmental, Cultural – influencing the opportunity