Center for Advancing Innovation

The Center for Advancing Innovation is a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit organization based in Bethesda, Maryland focused on accelerating technology transfer and commercialization, especially in biotechnology. It was founded by Rosemarie Truman, a consultant and former VP of Global Strategy at Marsh & McLennan. She was also a senior manager at Oracle and Goldman Sachs.[1]

Center for Advancing Innovation
Founded2012
FounderRosemarie Truman
FocusTechnology Transfer and Commercialization
Location
MethodChallenge competitions, research, consulting
Key people
Rosemarie Truman, President
WebsiteOfficial website

Among its efforts to promote innovation, the Center organizes "challenges" in which experts judge hundreds of promising technologies and research projects in such areas as breast cancer and nanotechnology. It recently announced a new challenge for 2017 called "Space Race" in partnership with NASA and the Medical Center of the Americas Foundation.[2][3]

The Washington Post reported that the Center has “helped launch 32 biotechnology start-ups in the three years since its pilot competition."[4]

The Center was a recipient of a first-ever “Excellence in Federal Challenge & Prize Competition” award from the U.S. General Services Administration in the category of “Best in Business Plans/Entrepreneurship” for the Breast Cancer Startup Challenge it organized with the National Cancer Institute and Avon Foundation for Women. The Center’s efforts led to 478 people being trained in the “business of science” and entrepreneurship.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ "About Us". TheCenterforAdvancingInnovation.org.
  2. ^ Kolenc, Vic (2015). "Startup competition tied to NASA inventions". El Paso Times.
  3. ^ "Medical Center of the Americas Foundation and the Center for Advancing Innovation Launch the SPACE RACE Challenge in Partnership with NASA". PRWeb.com. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  4. ^ Gregg, Aaron (November 28, 2015). "Bethesda nonprofit trying to bridge government and start-up community".
  5. ^ U.S. General Services Administration. "Challenge.gov Celebrates Five Years of Open Innovation". Challenge.gov.

External links edit