Governance and investment decision making in healthcare technology transfer - part 1: the principles and the challenge
Author: Lerer, Leonard ; D'Aunno, Thomas ; Schein, Douglas ; Rowell, NicholasINSEAD Area: Organisational BehaviourPublisher: Fontainebleau : INSEAD, 2007.Language: EnglishDescription: 22 p.Type of document: INSEAD CaseNote: Latest version available via https://publishing.insead.eduAbstract: Luke Petersen, a Swiss banker, faces up to his bank's structural, cyclical and market problems in health investment. This case scrutinizes the infrastructure of technology transfer, the mplementation of recent projects across different organizations, and strategic considerations of the role of technology transfer in the future of European health investment. It provides an up-to-date study of a successful investment fund in the rapidly changing life sciences sector. The study will benefit stakeholders interested in technology transfer, private equity, and innovation management. The case also informs the debate on broader societal issues related to technology transfer, in particular the tension between commercial interests and the public good.Pedagogical Objectives: . Managing technology transfer organizations . Valuation of intellectual property . Managing risk across various development stages . Selecting seed stage venture investments . Stakeholder communicationsItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Latest version available via <a href=https://publishing.insead.edu>https://publishing.insead.edu</a>
. Managing technology transfer organizations
. Valuation of intellectual property
. Managing risk across various development stages
. Selecting seed stage venture investments
. Stakeholder communications
Luke Petersen, a Swiss banker, faces up to his bank's structural, cyclical and market problems in health investment. This case scrutinizes the infrastructure of technology transfer, the mplementation of recent projects across different organizations, and strategic considerations of the role of technology transfer in the future of European health investment. It provides an up-to-date study of a successful investment fund in the rapidly changing life sciences sector. The study will benefit stakeholders interested in technology transfer, private equity, and innovation management. The case also informs the debate on broader societal issues related to technology transfer, in particular the tension between commercial interests and the public good.
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