Mission/Interest - National Innovation Summit and Showcase

Transcription

Mission/Interest - National Innovation Summit and Showcase
U.S. Air Force SBIR/STTR Program • 
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Website/POCs – www.afsbirs)r.com (“SBIR/STTR Points of Contact” link at top of page) Mission/Interest – SBIR/STTR contracts are an important tool for the Air Force’s discovery, development and integraIon of affordable warfighIng technologies for our air, space and cyberspace force. This program fosters innovaIon and cuMng-­‐edge research by small businesses, with the goal of transiIoning results into criIcal Air Force programs and plaOorms. Uniqueness – Centralized execuIon of program by Air Force SBIR/STTR Program Office (in the Air Force Research Laboratory). Operates as central point for focusing on small businesses to fund innovaIve soluIons. About 50 percent of Air Force-­‐sponsored topics come from Program ExecuIve Offices (PEOs), providing key user inputs into our solicitaIon processes. Budget – Annual SBIR/STTR budget is currently ~$305M Topics – Average 160 SBIR and 30 STTR topics per year (receive average of 2,500 proposals/year) Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) – Average 380 Phase I contracts at $150K and 160 Phase II contracts at $750K (Air Force limit for iniIal Phase IIs). Contract vs Grant – Contract SolicitaIons (Open/Close) – ParIcipates only in SBIR.1 and STTR.A (Jan/Mar) CommercializaIon – our SBIR/STTR CommercializaIon Readiness Program (CRP) directly links PEOs to AFRL experts; this linkage helps generate topics focused on criIcal needs and results in the opImal use of SBIR/STTR funds. CRP’s transiIon agents also help match current prime/
supply-­‐chain contractors with small businesses working in areas relevant to PEO needs. U.S. Army SBIR • 
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POC/Title and or Ins:tute/Website: John Smith, Program Manager/ h2ps://www.armysbir.army.mil/ Mission/interest -­‐ The Army SBIR program is designed to provide small, high-­‐tech businesses the opportunity to propose innovaEve research and development soluEons in response to criEcal Army needs Uniqueness -­‐ To be the Army’s premier source of innovaEve technology soluEons, providing direct access to America’s high-­‐tech small business research and development community, enabling our Soldiers deployed around the world. Budget -­‐ Annual FY13 -­‐ $149M, FY14 -­‐ $160M Topics -­‐ 175 Topics per year (Average from FY06 – FY13) Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ FY13 – ~300 Awards (Phase I – 198, Phase II – 102) Obligated Total to date ~$79M Contract vs Grant -­‐ Contracts Solicita:ons (Open/Close) – Phase I-­‐ 14.1 – (20 Nov/22 Jan), 14.2 – (23 Apr/25 June), 14.3 – (21 Aug/
22 Oct) Phase II -­‐ 14(A) -­‐ (15 Oct/15 Nov), 14(B) – (2 Mar/2 Apr), 14(C) – (17Jun/17 Jul), 14(D) – 2 Aug/2 Sep Commercializa:on Assistance -­‐ (Include if you have a program in this area) Technical Assistance Advocates, TransiEon Support (Phase II Enhancements, CommercializaEon Readiness Program) Areas of Interest -­‐ Advanced Materials and Manufacturing; Microelectronics and Photonics; Sensors and InformaEon Processing; SimulaEon and Modeling for AcquisiEon, Requirements, and Training (SMART); Engineering Sciences; Advanced Propulsion Technologies; Power and Directed Energy; Biological, Chemical, and Nuclear Defense; Life, Medical, and Behavioral Sciences; Environmental and Geosciences DARPA SBIR/STTR Programs
POC/Title and or Institute/Website: Susan Nichols, Program Director Small Business Programs
Office and SBIR/STTR Program Manager –
http://www.darpa.mil/Opportunities/SBIR_STTR/SBIR_STTR.aspx
Mission/interest - to prevent strategic surprise from negatively impacting U.S. national security and
create strategic surprise for U.S. adversaries by maintaining the technological superiority of the U.S.
military. DARPA’s scientific investigations span the gamut from laboratory efforts to the creation of
full-scale technology demonstrations in the fields of biology, medicine, computer science, chemistry,
physics, engineering, mathematics, material sciences, social sciences, neurosciences and more.
Uniqueness - DARPA is DoD’s innovation engine focused on revolutionary change.
Budget - Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$80M
Topics - Average 15 SBIR and 10 STTR Topics per year
Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) - Average 75 Phase I up to $100K; $50K option for Phase II
selectees; average 25 Phase II per year up to $1.5M.
Contract vs Grant - Contracts
Solicitations – DARPA typically participates in 3 SBIR and 2 STTR solicitations.
Commercialization Assistance - DARPA offers 24-month Transition and Commercialization Assistance
Program for all Phase II awardees. See our Fact Sheet:
http://www.darpa.mil/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=2147486306
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Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
SBIR Programs
POC: Elissa Sobolewski, Director SBIR, Science and Technology Directorate (S&T), h>ps://sbir2.st.dhs.gov; Kevin GuIerrez, DomesIc Nuclear DetecIon Office (DNDO) SBIR Program Manager Mission/interest: Technology soluIons for the Homeland Security Enterprise (HSE). We invest in small businesses that have the potenIal to provide innovaIve soluIons for the HSE. Uniqueness: SBIR topics are derived from technology gaps expressed by DHS’ operaIonal components (CBP, TSA, USCG, USSS, ICE, FEMA, CIS, and First Responders). The DHS SBIR program works one-­‐on-­‐one with SBIR companies to ensure that successful technology soluIons move on to Phase III (~36% of Phase II projects received Phase III awards for a total of ~$131M of non-­‐SBIR funds, including internal DHS R&D funds, funding from other government agencies, product sales, and private investments). Budget: Annual SBIR budget – FY2013 $15.7M (S&T $12.7M, DNDO $3.0M) Topics: 13 SBIR topics released in FY14 (11 S&T, 2 DNDO) Awards: (S&T) Phase I’s up to $100K each; and Phase II’s up to $750K each (DNDO) Phase I’s up to $150K each; Phase II’s up to $1M each Contract vs Grant: Contracts Solicita?ons (Open/Close): Joint SolicitaIon released in Early December/Mid January; and Early April/
May Commercializa?on Assistance (CAP): DHS offers the CAP program to all awardees to improve business and markeIng skills as well as specific technology driven market intelligence assessments. Commercializa?on Readiness Pilot Program (CRPP): DHS offers addiIonal funding to select DHS SBIR awardees for operaIonal tests and evaluaIons, as well as for the development of detailed commercializaIon roadmaps. Department of the Navy (DoN) SBIR/STTR Programs • 
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POC/Title and or Ins@tute/Website: John Williams, Director DON SBIR/STTR-­‐ www.navysbir.com Mission/interest -­‐ Technology that addresses Naval warfighter needs. We invest in small business and help them to transiEon that technology into a DoN or DoD weapons system, program or plaForm. Uniqueness -­‐ DoN SBIR/STTR promotes “technology pull”: >90% of Topics come from acquisiEon program offices. Our success is the SBIR/STTR firm obtaining Phase III funding from that program to mature and procure technology. Awarding $556M in Phase III’s. Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$330M Topics -­‐ Average 200 SBIR and 35 STTR Topics per year Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ Average 500 Phase I’s up to $150K each and 250 Phase II’s per year range from $350K to $1.5M. Contract vs Grant -­‐ Contracts Solicita@ons (Open/Close) – 16 Nov/16 Jan, 25 Jan/27 Mar, 24 Apr/26 Jun, 26 Jul/25 Sep Commercializa@on Assistance -­‐ (Include if you have a program in this area) DoN offers 11-­‐month TransiEon Assistance Program for all Phase II awardees with Navy Opportunity Forum annually. DoN has support staff within each SYSCOM and Program ExecuEve Office to support firm and Naval need. Department of the Defense (DoD) Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) SBIR/STTR Programs •  POC/Website: Chris Rinaldi, DoD SBIR/STTR Administrator -­‐ www.acq.osd.mil/sbir •  Mission/interest -­‐ To harness the innova?ve talents of our na?on’s small technology companies for U.S. military and economic strength in key DoD technology areas across the various Military Services and Defense Agencies. •  Uniqueness -­‐ Providing the opportunity for DoD to tap into the most innova?ve small businesses regardless of status. DoD SBIR/STTR Awards: !  Half are to firms with < 25 people !  One-­‐third to firms with < 10 people !  One-­‐FiJh are minority or women-­‐owned businesses !  A Quarter of the companies are first-­‐Ome winners •  Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$1.0B •  Topics -­‐ Average 600 SBIR and 150 STTR topics per year •  Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ ~ 2000 Phase I’s (up to $150K); ~1000 Phase II’s (up to $1.5M) •  Contract vs Grant -­‐ Contracts •  SolicitaOons (Open/Close) – 16 Nov/16 Jan, 25 Jan/27 Mar, 24 Apr/26 Jun, 26 Jul/25 Sep •  CommercializaOon Assistance -­‐ The DoD Commercializa?on Readiness Program (CRP) is designed to accelerate the commercializa?on and fielding of new capabili?es by iden?fying and selec?ng projects that meet high-­‐priority requirements, and formalizing collabora?on among small businesses, prime contractors, and DoD science and technology acquisi?on communi?es. U. S. Department of Energy (DOE) •  POC/Title and Website
–  Manny Oliver, Director, DOE SBIR/STTR Programs Office – www.science.energy.gov/sbir
–  Carl Hebron, DOE SBIR/STTR Programs Coordinator – www.science.energy.gov/sbir
–  Chris O’Gwin, DOE SBIR/STTR Commercialization & Outreach Assistance Program Manager – www.science.energy.gov/sbir
•  Mission/Interest – DOE’s mission is to ensure U. S. security and prosperity by addressing its energy, environmental, and
nuclear challenges through transformative science and technology solutions. SBIR/STTR solutions sought in the following
technology areas: clean energy, next generation scientific instruments, and nuclear security & environmental clean-up
•  Uniqueness – The DOE SBIR/STTR programs offer two unique opportunities:
–  Fast-Track grant opportunities to expedite the decision and award of SBIR/STTR phase I and II funding for meritorious
applications having high commercialization potential
–  Technology Transfer Opportunities to leverage technology developed at a DOE National Laboratory
–  Sequential Phase II grants provide additional financial support for (1) new R&D tasks and activities that are aligned with the
original scope of work for the Phase II grant and (2) new R&D tasks and activities that extend beyond the scope of the original
Phase II grant
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Annual Budget – $180M combined SBIR/STTR in FY 2013 budget
Topics – DOE offers approximately 65 SBIR/STTR topics with 250+ subtopics per year
Awards (Amt/Dollar Range) – In FY 2013, 244 Phase I’s up to $225K each and 107 Phase II’s up to $1.5M
Contract vs. Grants – The DOE SBIR/STTR is a competitive grants-driven program
Solicitations (Open/Close) – Two Phase I solicitations each year (Release 1 in July & Release 2 in October)
Commercialization Assistance
–  Phase I assistance: $5,000 total to develop a compelling business case for continuation of Phase II (and beyond) funding
–  Phase II assistance: $5,000 per year, $10,000 total; flexible offerings to meet a variety of commercialization needs
–  DOE CAP web site: http://science.energy.gov/sbir/commercialization-assistance/
SBIR Program at the Department of Education (ED) /
Institute of Education Sciences (IES)
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POC and Website: Ed Metz ([email protected] ), Program Manager; http://ies.ed.gov/sbir
Mission/interest - The IES SBIR program funds small businesses to develop and evaluate commercially
viable education technology products, including games, to improve student learning in general and
special education, and products to improve and support teacher practices and performance.
Uniqueness - IES SBIR promotes rigorous iterative research with students and teachers to inform the
development of prototypes, and rigorous research of fully developed products to demonstrate
usability, feasibility, and the potential of the product to improve outcomes. The program also promotes
commercial partnerships to distribute the products in the private sector marketplace.
Annual Budget - ~$8M
Topics - Products to improve students outcomes and to improve or facilitate teacher performance.
Awards - Average 12 Phase I’s up to $150K; 6 Phase II’s up to $900K; and 2 Fast-Track’s up to $1.05M.
Contract vs Grant - Contracts
Solicitations (Open/Close) – November 7 / December 22 (estimated)
Commercialization Assistance - The IES SBIR program provides commercialization assistance to all
awardees, and encourages partnerships to facilitate pathways that lead to marketplace dissemination
and sustainability.
Defense Threat Reduc0on Agency (DTRA) SBIR • 
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POC/Title and or Ins0tute: Mark Flohr, Program Manager, DTRA SBIR. [email protected] Mission/interest -­‐ Safeguard the United States and its allies from Global WMD threats by integraEng, synchronizing, and providing experEse, technologies, and capabiliEes addressing warfighter needs. Uniqueness -­‐ DTRA SBIR is focused solely on CBRNE and combat support. Our S&T areas include Nuclear Effects and Survivability, Enhanced Explosives & ConvenEonal Weapons Effects, CBR DetecEon, ProtecEon, and Modeling & SimulaEon. Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR ~$7.0M Topics -­‐ Average six topics on the XX.3 solicitaEon Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ Average eight Phase I’s up to $150K each and five Phase II’s per year up to $1.0M each. Contract vs Grant -­‐ Contracts Solicita0on (Pre-­‐Solicita0on/Open/Close) – 21 Aug 14/22 Sep 14/22 Oct 14 Environmental Protec/on Agency SBIR Program • 
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POC/Title and or Ins/tute/Website: www.epa.gov/ncer/sbir –  April Richards, Program Manager, EPA SBIR Program Mission/interest -­‐ Support the development and commercializaBon of environmental technologies that help EPA meet its mission of protecBng human health and the environment. Uniqueness -­‐ Small program with focus on one-­‐on-­‐one relaBonships with companies to help them commercialize and have posiBve environmental impact. Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR ~$5M Topics -­‐ Priority topic areas include: water, air, green manufacturing, waste and homeland security. Awards-­‐ Average 25 Phase I’s up to $100K each and 10 Phase II’s per year up to $300,000. Contract vs Grant -­‐ Contracts Solicita/ons (Open/Close) – One annual solicitaBon; typically opens in spring. Commercializa/on Assistance -­‐ EPA offers commercializaBon assistance to all of its Phase I and Phase II awardees. Phase II companies are eligible for a “commercializaBon opBon”-­‐-­‐ a supplement of up to $100,000 to match third party investment. • 
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Program Manager: Dr. Douglas Deason, Director Advanced Research MDA Phone: (256) 955-2020
Website: http://www.mda.mil/business/SBIR_STTR_programs.html
Mission: To promote innovative technology development through the SBIR/STTR program with relevance to the
Ballistic Missile Defense System (BMDS) and commercial applications; and, to provide technology transition
assistance.
Uniqueness: MDA SBIR/STTR promotes “technology pull”: more than 90 percent of topics come from system
program elements. MDA determines success by the SBIR/STTR firm obtaining endorsement from an MDA system
to mature and insert technology.
Annual Budget: Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$75M
Average Topics per Year: MDA averages 30 SBIR and 10 STTR topics per year
Awards (Total and Dollar Amount): MDA averages 120 Phase I and 50 Phase II awards per year
Technology of Interest: Lightweight Materials, Data Processing Algorithms, Models and Simulations, Optics,
Radar, Rocket Propulsion, Manufacturing Efficiency, and Energy Efficiency
In which Solicitations Do You Participate?: SBIR 14.2 and STTR 14.B
Commercialization Assistance : MDA offers the Technology Applications Program (TAP) through the National
Technology Transfer Center (NTTC). ( www.mdatechnology.net ) The TAP provides commercialization assistance
to MDA SBIR/STTR-funded companies
Twitter Handle: N/A Facebook Page: N/A
Do You Host Webinars?: No
Approved for Public Release
14-MDA-7777 (14 April 14)
www.acq.osd.mil/osbp/sbir NASA SBIR/STTR Programs • 
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POC/Title and or Ins9tute/Website: Program Execu-ve for NASA SBIR/STTR, Richard B. Leshner, PhD hAp://sbir.nasa.gov Mission/interest -­‐ Technology that addresses future mission needs in NASA’s Mission Directorates – Science, Aeronau-cs Research, Human Explora-on and Opera-ons, and Space Technology Uniqueness -­‐ The SBIR/STTR program supports both “push” and “pull” technology development – some-mes ar-cula-ng NASA needs for technology development and iden-fying certain performance criteria, other -mes describing a future desired capability and seeking proposals with innova-ve ideas to sa-sfy that need. Topics are generated by experts at NASA Centers who plan for and execute NASA tech demo flights and opera-onal missions. Award Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$160M Topics -­‐ Average 75 SBIR and 20 STTR Topics per year Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ Average 300 Phase I’s at $125K each, and 90-­‐110 Phase II’s per year ranging from $750K to $1.5M. Contract vs Grant -­‐ Contracts Solicita9ons (Open/Close) – Mid November 2014 – Late January 2015 Commercializa9on Assistance -­‐ NASA offers op-ons to expand projects beyond Phase 2 from 6-­‐24 months: if companies can find non-­‐NASA SBIR/STTR investments to enhance their SBIR/STTR projects beyond what is accomplished in Phase 2, the NASA SBIR/STTR program will match those investments (within certain limits).
Department of the Navy (DON) SBIR/STTR Programs NAVSEA • 
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POC/Title and Website: Dean Putnam, SBIR Program Manager Mission/interest -­‐ Technology that addresses Naval warfighter needs. We invest in small business and help them to transiDon that technology into a DON or DoD weapons system, program or plaForm. Uniqueness -­‐ NAVSEA SBIR/STTR promotes “technology pull”: >90% of Topics come from ship, submarine, carrier and weapon system acquisiDon program offices. Our success is the SBIR/STTR firm obtaining Phase III funding from that program to mature, procure and deploy innovaDons. Budget -­‐ Annual NAVSEA SBIR + STTR budget = ~$75M Topics -­‐ SBIR and STTR Topics vary each year -­‐ 75 are anDcipated in FY 15.1 RFP Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ Average 125 Phase I’s up to $150K each and 70 Phase II’s per year range from $350K to $1.5M. Contract vs Grant -­‐ Contracts SolicitaNons (Open/Close) – 16 Nov/16 Jan, 25 Jan/27 Mar, 24 Apr/26 Jun, 26 Jul/25 Sep CommercializaNon Assistance -­‐ NAVSEA parDcipates in the DON 11-­‐month TransiDon Assistance Program for all Phase II awardees with Navy Opportunity Forum annually. NAVSEA has SBIR/STTR TransiDon Managers and support staff within each SYSCOM and Program ExecuDve Office to support firm and Naval needs. NCI SBIR Development Center
http://sbir.cancer.gov
STTR: Small Business Technology Transfer
SBIR: Small Business Innovation Research
• Set-aside program to fund small business early stage R&D
• For small business concerns (SBC) that are organized as for-profit USbased businesses with fewer than 500 employees
• SBC must do at least 2/3 of R&D work in Phase I, at least 1/2 in Phase II
• PI must be greater than 50% employed by SBC
• Proof-of-Concept study
• $150,000 over 6 mo (SBIR),
1 year (STTR); max $225,000*
NEW Directto-Phase II
Phase I
FEASIBILITY
Phase II
DEVELOPMENT
Fast-Track Application
Combined Phase I & II
• Basic SBC eligibility same as SBIR
• Formal cooperative R&D effort with a US research institution
• SBC must do minimum 40% of work; research institution must do
minimum 30% of work
• PI may be primarily employed by either SBC or research institution
• Technology validation & clinical translation
• Follow-on funding for SBIR Phase II awardees
• Expectation that applicants will secure
substantial 3rd-party investor funds
• $1M per year over 3 years
NCI SBIR Phase IIB Bridge Award
CROSSING THE VALLEY OF DEATH
• Commercialization stage
• Use of non-SBIR/STTR funds
• Research & Development
• Commercialization plan required
• $1M over 2 years; max $1.5M*
Benefits of the SBIR/STTR Programs
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Phase III
COMMERCIALIZATION
Funding is non-dilutive & doesn’t impact company stock
Awards are not loans; no repayment is required
Intellectual property rights are retained by the small business
Awards provide company recognition, verification, and visibility
Projects are vetted through NIH’s rigorous scientific peer review
Can be used as leverage to attract additional funding
FY14 SBIR/STTR
Funding
~$757M at NIH
~$119M at NCI
SBIR/STTR Program Goals
• Stimulate technological innovation
• Meet Federal R&D needs
• Foster & encourage participation in innovation
& entrepreneurship by socially & economically
disadvantaged persons
• Increase private-sector commercialization of
innovations derived from Federal R&D funding
[email protected]
240.276.5300
Twitter: @NCIsbir
http://sbir.cancer.gov
Grant Funding Opportunities
NCI SBIR Phase IIB Bridge Award
Omnibus Solicitation Applications due: Apr 5, Aug 5, Dec 5
What We’re
Funding
• Investigator-initiated projects accepted in a broad range
of areas supporting the mission of NCI
Innovative Health IT for Broad Adoption by
Healthcare Systems and Consumers (PA-12-196)
Applications due: April 5, August 5, December 5 through 2014
Phase II or Fast-Track Applications Only
http://sbir.cancer.gov/resource/hit/
• For development & dissemination of evidence-based
health IT products
372 Projects
Health IT &
Software Tools
8%
Tools for
Basic Research
13%
Development of Highly Innovative Tools and
Technology for Analysis of Single Cells (PA-13-140)
Applications due: April 5, August 5, December 5 through 2015
http://commonfund.nih.gov/Singlecell/
• For next-generation tools that distinguish heterogeneous
states among individual cells
Innovative Molecular Analysis Technology Development for
Cancer Research and Clinical Care (SBIR-IMAT, PAR-13-327)
Applications due November 4 & May 28; through 2016
http://sbir.cancer.gov/funding/technology/
• For next-generation molecular and cellular analytical
technologies for cancer detection and/or characterization
Applications due April 21, 2014
http://sbir.cancer.gov/funding/phase2bridgeaward.asp
• Up to $1M/year for up to 3 years following a Ph II award
• Open to all SBIR or STTR Phase II awardees working on:
cancer therapeutics, imaging technologies, diagnostics
• Competitive preference & funding priority to applicants
raising substantial third-party funds (i.e. ≥ 1:1 match)
Contract Solicitation
Therapeutics
36%
In Vitro
Diagnostics
18%
http://sbir.cancer.gov/funding/contracts
• Research areas of high priority to NCI with setaside funds & milestone-driven deliverables
Recent topics include:
Imaging
16%
Devices for
Cancer Therapy
9%
• Therapeutic agents targeting
Cancer Stem Cells
• Reformulation of failed
chemotherapeutic drugs
• 3D tumor microenvironment
Tissue Culture Systems
• Single cell Proteomic
Analysis from solid tumors
•Phospho-Threonine
Protein Standards
• Biosensor-based tumor
Biopsy Device
• Radiation Modulators
• Software Tools for
environmental measures
Recent Changes to the SBIR/STTR Programs
Percentage of extramural NIH funding reserved is increasing for
• Small businesses majority owned by multiple VCOCs, hedge funds, or
SBIR (2.8% FY14, 2.9% FY15) & STTR (0.40% FY14-FY15)
private equity firms are now eligible to apply for NIH SBIR funding
• $5000 Technical Assistance award requests, open to SBIR & STTR • NEW – Direct-to-Phase II Pilot program announced http://bit.ly/NIHD2P2
• Limits on Award Sizes: $225,000 (Ph I), $1.5M (Ph II)
• NEW – SBIR Ph I awardees can apply for STTR Ph II and vice versa
*Waivers available for FY15 projects in specific topic areas
For the Latest on NIH Implementation: http://go.usa.gov/gubA
Na#onal Ins#tutes of Health (NIH) SBIR/STTR Programs Na#onal Ins#tute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism • 
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POC/Title and or Ins#tute/Website: Kathy Jung, Ph.D., /Program Director. h6p://www.niaaa.nih.gov/ Email: [email protected]. Mission/interest – The mission of NIAAA is to direct, support, and conduct biomedical and behavioral research on the causes, consequences, treatment, and prevenIon of alcoholism and alcohol-­‐related problems, including health consequences. Uniqueness – The majority of our awards are invesIgator-­‐iniIated. Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$11 M (FY14). Topics – Listed in the Omnibus solicitaIon; also invesIgator-­‐iniIated research. Awards (Amount and Dollar Range) -­‐ Phase I: up to $225K each; Phase II: up to 1.5M each. 25-­‐30 new and conInuing awards per year. Grants vs Contracts -­‐ Variable. Currently 90% grants, 10% contracts. Solicita#ons (Open/Close) -­‐ Omnibus and most solicitaIons; April 5th; August 5th; December 5th; for AIDS (May 7th; September 7th; January 7th). Commercializa#on Assistance -­‐ NIH offers the Phase I Niche Assessment Program and Phase II CommercializaIon Assistance Program annually for SBIR and STTR awardees. Na#onal Ins#tutes of Health (NIH) SBIR/STTR Programs • 
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POC and Ins#tute Website: Chris&ne Densmore, M.S., NIDDK SBIR/STTR Coordinator and Program Director h>p://www.niddk.nih.gov. Mission – The SBIR/STTR programs are vehicles of innova&on for development and commercializa&on of novel technologies and products to advance science and disseminate science-­‐based informa&on on diabetes and other endocrine and metabolic diseases; diges&ve diseases, nutri&onal disorders, and obesity; and kidney, urologic, and hematologic diseases, to improve people’s health and quality of life. Uniqueness -­‐ NIDDK SBIR/STTRs support technology development from basic through clinical studies/
trials. The majority of applica&ons are for inves&gator-­‐ini&ated projects. Budget -­‐ ~$48M (FY14). Topics – The majority of applica&ons are inves&gator-­‐ini&ated via the Omnibus SBIR/STTR solicita&ons (PA-­‐14-­‐071/72). DK has a number of FOAs targeted toward specific-­‐mission areas as well (see link above). Awards -­‐ Phase I up to $225K (generally 1yr), Phase II up to 1.5M (generally 2yrs), Phase IIB up to 3M (up to 3yrs). Grants vs Contracts – Grants. Solicita#ons (Open/Close) – Applica&ons are due April 5th; August 5th; December 5th. Commercializa#on Assistance -­‐ NIH Phase I Niche Assessment Program and Phase II Commercializa&on Assistance Program.
Na#onal Ins#tute of Mental Health (NIMH) SBIR/
STTR Programs • 
POC/Title and or Ins#tute/Website: – 
Margaret Grabb, Ph.D., Coordinator -­‐ SBIR/STTR. (h<p://www.nimh.nih.gov/funding/small-­‐business-­‐research-­‐programs.shtml). Email: [email protected]. – 
Rebecca DelCarmen-­‐Wiggins ,Ph.D., Program Officer -­‐ Division of AIDS Research (DAR). (h<p://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/organizaOon/dar/hiv). Email: [email protected]. Adam Haim, Ph.D., SBIR/STTR Program Officer – Division of Services and IntervenOon Research (DSIR, NIMH). (
h<p://www.nimh.nih.gov/funding/sbir-­‐s<r-­‐program-­‐contacts.shtml) Email: [email protected] Michael North, ScienOfic Program Analyst -­‐ Division of Neuroscience and Basic Behavioral Science (DNBBS). Email: [email protected]. – 
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Mission/Interest – The development of technologies that can advance the mission of the insOtute, including basic neuroscience research, translaOonal and clinical research, clinical diagnosis and treatment, and disseminaOon and implementaOon of evidence-­‐based research on mental disorders. • 
Uniqueness – Support basic biomedical technologies including: soUware (such as informaOcs tools and resources and tools for analyzing data); hardware (such as the development of instrumentaOon, devices, or biosensors); wetware (such as the use of iRNAs or other bioacOve agents as research tools or molecular imaging agents or geneOc approaches to label neural circuits or modify circuit funcOons). AddiOonally, support clinically relevant technologies: drug discovery/development, biomarkers, computerized objecOve assessment tools, and computerized intervenOons for treaOng mental disorders, au#sm, or HIV-­‐associated neurocogni#ve dysfunc#on. Applicants are strongly encourage to contact NIMH before submiNng an applica#on. • 
Research Resources – NIMH offers addiOonal resources for leveraging SBIR funds (e.g. geneOcs repository, PsychoacOve Drug Screening Program, Toxicological EvaluaOon of Novel ligands Program). • 
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Budget – Annual SBIR and STTR budget : $36M Awards (Amount and Dollar Range) – Generally, a budget cap of $225,000 for Phase I grants and $1,500,000 tor Phase II grants. Please contact NIMH for technologies that fall under the SBA budget cap waiver. • 
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Grants vs Contracts – 100% Grant Solicita#ons (Open/Close) – April 5, August 5, December 5; for AIDS related applicaOons the due dates are May 7, September 7, and January. PAs: Novel Tools for InvesOgaOng Brain-­‐derived GPCRs in Mental Health Research: SBIR, STTR; Early Stage Development of Technologies in Biomedical CompuOng, InformaOcs, and Big Data Science : SBIR, STTR. DHHS,Na'onal Ins'tutes of Health (NIH) SBIR/STTR Programs Na'onal Ins'tute on Minority Health and Health Dispari'es (NIMHD) • 
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POC/Title and or Ins2tute/Website: Vincent A. Thomas, Jr., M.S.W., M.P.A.,SBIR/STTR Program Manager & Derrick C. Tabor, Ph.D., Program Official; hPp://www.nimhd.nih.gov Mission/interest-­‐ The mission of NIMHD is to lead scien'fic research to improve minority health and eliminate health dispari'es. Uniqueness-­‐ NIMHD SBIR/STTR funding opportuni'es are intended to assist small business concerns (SBCs) to develop and commercialize innova've technologies that improve minority health and reduce health dispari'es by providing a product, process or service that is effec've, affordable, culturally acceptable, and deliverable to racial/ethnic minori'es, low-­‐income and rural popula'ons. Budget-­‐ Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$8.1M Areas of Interest-­‐ Improving health outcomes and achieving health equity for health disparity popula'ons; innova've health dispari'es research and use of electronic health records, and the development of innova've so]ware and tools for science and health science educa'on. Interven'ons that address: Behavioral change, Preven'on, Social determinants of Health and Health Literacy. Awards (Amt. and Dollar Range) -­‐ Phase l's up to $1SOK to $225K each applica'on, and Phase ll's up to $1M to 1.5M each applica'on. Contract vs Grant-­‐ Grants PHS 2014-­‐2, Omnibus Solicita2on (Receipt Dates)-­‐ April 5, August 5, December 5 Commercializa2on Assistance-­‐ The NIH provides two programs: the Niche Assessment Program for Phase I awardees helps the SBC to iden'fy other uses of technology, determines compe''ve advantages and develops market entry strategy; and the Commercializa'on Assistance Program for Phase II awardees helps promising small life science companies develop their commercial businesses and transi'on their SBIR/STTR-­‐ developed technologies into the marketplace. Na#onal Ins#tutes of Health (NIH) SBIR/STTR Programs Na#onal Center for Advancing Transla#onal Sciences (NCATS) •  POC/Title and or Ins#tute/Website: Lili M. Por#lla, MPA NCATS SBIR/STTR Program Director h7p://www.ncats.nih.gov/funding-­‐and-­‐noCces/small-­‐business/small-­‐business.html •  Mission/interest – In 2011, NCATS was established to transform the translaConal science process so that new treatments and cures for disease can be delivered to paCents faster. TranslaConal sciences comprise the process of turning observaCons in the laboratory and clinic into effecCve intervenCons that improve the health of individuals and the public — from diagnosCcs and therapeuCcs to medical procedures and behavioral changes. •  Uniqueness -­‐ NCATS is interested in the development of innovaCve tools, technologies and intervenCon plaMorms that would support the creaCon of novel therapeuCcs or diagnosCcs, especially for rare and neglected diseases. The applicaCon may address any stage of translaCon. •  Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$16M (FY14). •  Topics -­‐ hNp://www.ncats.nih.gov/funding-­‐and-­‐no#ces/small-­‐business/topics/topics.html •  Awards (Amount and Dollar Range) -­‐ ~15 Phase I’s up to $225K each and ~ 15 Phase II’s /year range up to 1.5M each. •  Grants vs Contracts -­‐ 75% grants, 25% contracts. •  Solicita#ons (Open/Close) -­‐ Omnibus and most solicitaCons; April 5th; August 5th; December 5th •  Commercializa#on Assistance -­‐ NIH offers the Phase I Niche Assessment Program and Phase II CommercializaCon Assistance Program annually for SBIR and STTR awardees. NCATS has several preclinical programs such as TRND and BrIDGs.
Na#onal Ins#tutes of Health SBIR/STTR Programs Na#onal Eye Ins#tute (NEI) • 
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Contact Person: Jerome R. Wujek, Ph.D., NEI SBIR/STTR Program Director, Email: [email protected]; Ins#tute Website: hDp://www.nei.nih.gov/. Mission/interest – The mission of NEI is to reduce the burden of blinding eye diseases and visual disorders, and to preserve sight. ApplicaLons for all areas of vision research are encouraged. Uniqueness -­‐ NEI supports predominantly invesLgator-­‐iniLated research, meaning very few targeted programs. Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$17M (FY14). Topics – Please see Program DescripLons and Research Topics linked to 2014 Omnibus Grant SolicitaLons of the NIH (found at hDp://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/sbir.htm). Awards -­‐ Standard published budget guideline for NIH. Grants vs Contracts – Grants. Solicita#ons (Open/Close) – Standard receipt dates (April 5th; August 5th; December 5th). Commercializa#on Assistance – As available through NIH. National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), NIH
POC/Title and or Institute/Website: Natalia Kruchinin Ph.D., NIAID,NIH SBIR/STTR Program
Coordinator email: [email protected]
http://www.niaid.nih.gov/researchfunding/sb/Pages/default.aspx
Mission/interest: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH conducts and
supports basic and applied research to better understand, treat, and ultimately prevent infectious,
immunologic, and allergic diseases.
Budget - Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$118M (FY14)
Topics- Development of therapies, vaccines, diagnostic tests and other technologies for diseases
in NIAID mission areas in order to improve human health.
NIAID Small Business High Priority Areas of Interest:
http://www.niaid.nih.gov/researchfunding/sb/pages/sbirareas.aspx
Awards (Amount and Dollar Range)- Phase I:$225,000; Phase II $1.5M
Grants vs. Contracts - 92% grants, 8% contracts.
Solicitations (Open/Close) -Omnibus and most solicitations; April 5th; August 5th; December 5th;
for AIDS (May 7th; September 7th; January 7th). More than 10 open solicitations, some with
custom dates.
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Na#onal Ins#tutes of Health (NIH) SBIR/STTR Programs • 
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POC and Ins#tute Website: Chris&ne Densmore, M.S., NIDDK SBIR/STTR Coordinator and Program Director h>p://www.niddk.nih.gov. Mission – The SBIR/STTR programs are vehicles of innova&on for development and commercializa&on of novel technologies and products to advance science and disseminate science-­‐based informa&on on diabetes and other endocrine and metabolic diseases; diges&ve diseases, nutri&onal disorders, and obesity; and kidney, urologic, and hematologic diseases, to improve people’s health and quality of life. Uniqueness -­‐ NIDDK SBIR/STTRs support technology development from basic through clinical studies/
trials. The majority of applica&ons are for inves&gator-­‐ini&ated projects. Budget -­‐ ~$48M (FY14). Topics – The majority of applica&ons are inves&gator-­‐ini&ated via the Omnibus SBIR/STTR solicita&ons (PA-­‐14-­‐071/72). DK has a number of FOAs targeted toward specific-­‐mission areas as well (see link above). Awards -­‐ Phase I up to $225K (generally 1yr), Phase II up to 1.5M (generally 2yrs), Phase IIB up to 3M (up to 3yrs). Grants vs Contracts – Grants. Solicita#ons (Open/Close) – Applica&ons are due April 5th; August 5th; December 5th. Commercializa#on Assistance -­‐ NIH Phase I Niche Assessment Program and Phase II Commercializa&on Assistance Program.
Na#onal Ins#tute of Mental Health (NIMH) SBIR/
STTR Programs • 
POC/Title and or Ins#tute/Website: – 
Margaret Grabb, Ph.D., Coordinator -­‐ SBIR/STTR. (h<p://www.nimh.nih.gov/funding/small-­‐business-­‐research-­‐programs.shtml). Email: [email protected]. – 
Rebecca DelCarmen-­‐Wiggins ,Ph.D., Program Officer -­‐ Division of AIDS Research (DAR). (h<p://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/organizaOon/dar/hiv). Email: [email protected]. Adam Haim, Ph.D., SBIR/STTR Program Officer – Division of Services and IntervenOon Research (DSIR, NIMH). (
h<p://www.nimh.nih.gov/funding/sbir-­‐s<r-­‐program-­‐contacts.shtml) Email: [email protected] Michael North, ScienOfic Program Analyst -­‐ Division of Neuroscience and Basic Behavioral Science (DNBBS). Email: [email protected]. – 
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Mission/Interest – The development of technologies that can advance the mission of the insOtute, including basic neuroscience research, translaOonal and clinical research, clinical diagnosis and treatment, and disseminaOon and implementaOon of evidence-­‐based research on mental disorders. • 
Uniqueness – Support basic biomedical technologies including: soUware (such as informaOcs tools and resources and tools for analyzing data); hardware (such as the development of instrumentaOon, devices, or biosensors); wetware (such as the use of iRNAs or other bioacOve agents as research tools or molecular imaging agents or geneOc approaches to label neural circuits or modify circuit funcOons). AddiOonally, support clinically relevant technologies: drug discovery/development, biomarkers, computerized objecOve assessment tools, and computerized intervenOons for treaOng mental disorders, au#sm, or HIV-­‐associated neurocogni#ve dysfunc#on. Applicants are strongly encourage to contact NIMH before submiNng an applica#on. • 
Research Resources – NIMH offers addiOonal resources for leveraging SBIR funds (e.g. geneOcs repository, PsychoacOve Drug Screening Program, Toxicological EvaluaOon of Novel ligands Program). • 
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Budget – Annual SBIR and STTR budget : $36M Awards (Amount and Dollar Range) – Generally, a budget cap of $225,000 for Phase I grants and $1,500,000 tor Phase II grants. Please contact NIMH for technologies that fall under the SBA budget cap waiver. • 
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Grants vs Contracts – 100% Grant Solicita#ons (Open/Close) – April 5, August 5, December 5; for AIDS related applicaOons the due dates are May 7, September 7, and January. PAs: Novel Tools for InvesOgaOng Brain-­‐derived GPCRs in Mental Health Research: SBIR, STTR; Early Stage Development of Technologies in Biomedical CompuOng, InformaOcs, and Big Data Science : SBIR, STTR. Na#onal Ins#tutes of Health (NIH) SBIR/STTR Programs Na#onal Ins#tute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) • 
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POC/Title and or Ins#tute/Website: Stephanie Fer,g, NINDS SBIR/STTR Project Manager, www.ninds.nih.gov/funding/small-­‐business. Email: fer,[email protected] Mission/interest: The mission of NINDS is to reduce the burden of neurological disease. The NINDS accepts a broad range of small business applica,ons that are significant, innova,ve, and relevant to its mission. Examples include development of therapeu,cs and diagnos,cs for neurological disorders, as well as development of technology and tools for neuroscience research. Uniqueness: NIH SBIR/STTR has mul,ple receipt dates, dozens of solicita,ons, and the ability to revise and resubmit unfunded grant applica,ons. NIH will not be the customer, focus on commercializa,on into open market. The majority of our awardees are inves,gator ini,ated. NINDS supports both pre-­‐clinical research and clinical trials through the SBIR/STTR programs. Budget: The annual SBIR + STTR budget is ~$43M (FY14). Topics: The majority of our applica,ons come in through the general NIH SBIR/STTR solicita,ons (PA-­‐14-­‐071/PA-­‐14-­‐072). Specific topic solicita,ons can be found at: h\p://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/
sbir_announcements.htm Awards (Amt and Dollar Range): We fund on average ~90 awards/year. Total funding support normally does not exceed $225K for Phase I and $1.5M for Phase II. However, NIH has received a waiver to exceed this amount for some topics and some solicita,ons permit larger budgets. Contract vs Grant: Grants and Coopera,ve Agreements Solicita#ons (Open/Close): Standard Receipt Dates: April 5th, Aug 5th, Dec 5th (specific solicita,ons may have special receipt dates) Commercializa#on Assistance: NIH has two Technical Assistance Programs: the Niche Assessment Program for Phase I awardees and the Commercializa,on Assistance Program for Phase II awardees. NINDS also provides addi,onal support to Phase II awardees through a Phase IIB SBIR/STTR compe,ng renewal. Na#onal Ins#tutes of Health (NIH) SBIR/STTR Programs • 
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POC/Title and or Ins#tute/Website: Ma#hew E. Portnoy, Ph.D., NIH SBIR/STTR Program Director h#p://sbir.nih.gov. Email: [email protected]. Follow us @NIHsbir. Mission/interest -­‐ Advancing Medicine Through InnovaIon. Biomedical and behavioral research and development funding to U.S. small businesses to explore the technological feasibility of innovaIve projects with commercial potenIal to create medical soluIons for public benefit. The SBIR and STTR programs focus on bridging the gap between basic science and translaIon of scienIfic discovery into tangible products and services. Uniqueness -­‐ NIH SBIR/STTR has mulIple receipt dates, dozens of solicitaIons, and the ability to revise and resubmit unfunded grant applicaIons. NIH will not be the customer, focus on commercializaIon into open market. Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$750M (FY14). Topics -­‐ More than 600 SBIR/STTR topics per year plus invesIgator-­‐iniIated research encouraged. Awards (Amount and Dollar Range) -­‐ ~800 Phase I’s up to $225K each and ~ 250 Phase II’s per year range up to 1.5M each. Grants vs Contracts -­‐ 95% grants, 5% contracts. Solicita#ons (Open/Close) -­‐ Omnibus and most solicitaIons; April 5th; August 5th; December 5th; for AIDS (May 7th; September 7th; January 7th). More than 50 open solicitaIons, some with custom dates. Commercializa#on Assistance -­‐ NIH offers the Phase I Niche Assessment Program and Phase II CommercializaIon Assistance Program annually for SBIR and STTR awardees. DHHS,Na'onal Ins'tutes of Health (NIH) SBIR/STTR Programs Na'onal Ins'tute on Minority Health and Health Dispari'es (NIMHD) • 
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POC/Title and or Ins2tute/Website: Vincent A. Thomas, Jr., M.S.W., M.P.A.,SBIR/STTR Program Manager & Derrick C. Tabor, Ph.D., Program Official; hPp://www.nimhd.nih.gov Mission/interest-­‐ The mission of NIMHD is to lead scien'fic research to improve minority health and eliminate health dispari'es. Uniqueness-­‐ NIMHD SBIR/STTR funding opportuni'es are intended to assist small business concerns (SBCs) to develop and commercialize innova've technologies that improve minority health and reduce health dispari'es by providing a product, process or service that is effec've, affordable, culturally acceptable, and deliverable to racial/ethnic minori'es, low-­‐income and rural popula'ons. Budget-­‐ Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$8.1M Areas of Interest-­‐ Improving health outcomes and achieving health equity for health disparity popula'ons; innova've health dispari'es research and use of electronic health records, and the development of innova've so]ware and tools for science and health science educa'on. Interven'ons that address: Behavioral change, Preven'on, Social determinants of Health and Health Literacy. Awards (Amt. and Dollar Range) -­‐ Phase l's up to $1SOK to $225K each applica'on, and Phase ll's up to $1M to 1.5M each applica'on. Contract vs Grant-­‐ Grants PHS 2014-­‐2, Omnibus Solicita2on (Receipt Dates)-­‐ April 5, August 5, December 5 Commercializa2on Assistance-­‐ The NIH provides two programs: the Niche Assessment Program for Phase I awardees helps the SBC to iden'fy other uses of technology, determines compe''ve advantages and develops market entry strategy; and the Commercializa'on Assistance Program for Phase II awardees helps promising small life science companies develop their commercial businesses and transi'on their SBIR/STTR-­‐ developed technologies into the marketplace. DoC Na'onal Ins'tute of Standards and Technology (NIST) SBIR Program •  POC/Title and or Ins'tute/Website: Mary Clague, NIST SBIR Program Manager – [email protected], h?p://www.nist.gov/sbir. •  Mission/interest -­‐ NIST's mission is to promote U.S. innovaHon and industrial compeHHveness by advancing measurement science, standards, and technology in ways that enhance economic security and improve our quality of life. •  Uniqueness -­‐ SolicitaHon topics vary widely and change annually. Past topics include: bioscience, building and fire research, chemistry, cybersecurity, energy, healthcare, IT, manufacturing, materials science, nanotechnology, and physics. •  Budget – Annual SBIR ~$2.25M •  Topics -­‐ Average 15 SBIR Topics per year •  Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ Average 10 Phase I’s up to $90K each and 5 Phase II’s up to $300K each. •  Contract vs Grant -­‐ Grants •  Solicita'on – Opens late November, closes 75 days later. National Science Foundation (NSF)
SBIR/STTR Programs
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POC/Title/Institute/Website: Joe Hennessey, Senior Advisor, National Science
Foundation, http://www.nsf.gov/eng/iip/sbir/
Mission/interest - High risk/ high commercial potential for technology that addresses
nanotechnology, adv. materials, adv. manufacturing; biological and chemical technology;
electronics, information and communication technology; and education applications.
Uniqueness - NSF provides grants based on an external peer review process. NSF is particularly
focused on the success of its grantees in the private sector. Supplemental funding opportunities
exist for Phase I and II grantees (Phase IB & IIB) that encourage third party investments.
Budget - Annual - SBIR + STTR budget ~$159M.
Topics – Information/Communication, Chemical/Environmental, Semiconductors/Photonics,
Educational Applications; Advanced Manufacturing, Nanotechnology; Electronic Hardware,
Robotics, Wireless Technologies; Advanced Materials and Instrumentation; Biological, Smart
Health and Biomedical Technologies.
Awards - FY-13: 385 Phase I’s (SBIR $150K max, STTR $225K max), 101 Phase II’s ($750K max).
Contract vs. Grant - Grants
Solicitations (Open/Close) – Next opportunities: SBIR Phase I – 14 June (Solicitation 14-539);
STTR Ph. I – 11 June (Solicitation 14-540). SBIR/STTR Phase I and Phase II proposals are received
2 times per year per solicitation instructions (Jun/Dec ).
Commercialization Assistance – NSF provides commercialization assistance to its Phase I and
Phase II grantees to help them in developing commercialization plans and third party
partnerships.
National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), NIH
POC/Title and or Institute/Website: Natalia Kruchinin Ph.D., NIAID,NIH SBIR/STTR Program
Coordinator email: [email protected]
http://www.niaid.nih.gov/researchfunding/sb/Pages/default.aspx
Mission/interest: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH conducts and
supports basic and applied research to better understand, treat, and ultimately prevent infectious,
immunologic, and allergic diseases.
Budget - Annual SBIR + STTR budget ~$118M (FY14)
Topics- Development of therapies, vaccines, diagnostic tests and other technologies for diseases
in NIAID mission areas in order to improve human health.
NIAID Small Business High Priority Areas of Interest:
http://www.niaid.nih.gov/researchfunding/sb/pages/sbirareas.aspx
Awards (Amount and Dollar Range)- Phase I:$225,000; Phase II $1.5M
Grants vs. Contracts - 92% grants, 8% contracts.
Solicitations (Open/Close) -Omnibus and most solicitations; April 5th; August 5th; December 5th;
for AIDS (May 7th; September 7th; January 7th). More than 10 open solicitations, some with
custom dates.
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Department of the Navy SBIR/STTR Programs -­‐ ONR SBIR Program ONR SBIR POC and Website: Lore-­‐Anne Ponirakis, ONR SBIR Program Manager www.onr.navy.mil/en/Science-­‐Technology/Directorates/TransiDon/SBIR-­‐STTR.aspx Mission: ONR SBIR program is an integral part of the Naval Science and Technology program ! SBIR topics address naval needs and should ulDmately transiDon to the fleet through enabling technologies Uniqueness: The ONR SBIR program tends to invest more in Discovery and InvenDon Technologies or earlier stage technologies compared to the other Syscoms Budget: Annual ONR SBIR budget ~$43M Awards (Amount and $ Range): ! Average 140 Phase I’s per year up to $150K each, AND ! Average 60 Phase II’s per year ranging from $500K to $1.125M Contract vs. Grant: Contract; typically cost-­‐plus fixed fee Topics: Average 40 SBIR topics per year SolicitaHons (Open -­‐ Close): ONR SBIR program parDcipates in two solicitaDons per year: ! 14.2: 28 Apr 14 -­‐25 Jun 14 ! 15.1: 14 Dec 14 – 18 Feb 15 CommercializaHon Assistance: ONR SBIR program offers 11 month TransiDon Assistance Program for all Phase II awardees at annual Navy Opportunity Forum SolicitaHon Release SolicitaHon Opens (1 month) SolicitaHon Closes EvaluaHon of Proposal Submissions Small Business Selected for Award ConsideraHon SBIR Solicita,on Process List of Selectees Posted on www.navysbir.com SBIR Phase I Contract Award 1 Joint Science & Technology Office for Chemical and Biological Defense/ CBD SBIR Program • 
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POC/Title and or Ins?tute/Website -­‐ Mr. Larry Pollack, Program Manager, Chemical and Biological Defense (CBD) SBIR, www.cbdsbir.com Mission/interest -­‐ To ensure the U.S. Military has the capability and technologies required to operate effecIvely and decisively in the face of chemical or biological warfare threats at home and abroad Uniqueness -­‐ Niche focus of CBD SBIR program is directed solely to the ‘ Technologies of Interest’ (shown below) to ensure the warfighter has start-­‐of-­‐the-­‐art tools to address specific these Capability Areas Budget -­‐ FY14: $13M Topics -­‐ Average 5 SBIR topics per year Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ Average 10 Phase I’s up to $150K per award and 5 Phase II’s annually @$1M per award Contract vs Grant -­‐ Contract Solicita?ons (Open/Close) -­‐ FY15.1 (Nov 2014/Jan 2015) Technology of Interest -­‐ Chemical and Biological DetecIon (ContaminaIon Avoidance); ProtecIon (Individual & CollecIve); DecontaminaIon (Hazard MiIgaIon); Medical Pre-­‐treatments; Chemical and Biological Countermeasures (TherapeuIcs); Medical DiagnosIcs and Disease Surveillance POC/Title: Bonny Heet, SBIR/STTR Program Manager, USSOCOM/SORDAC-­‐ST, h?p://www.ussocomsbir.com/, [email protected]. Mission/Interest: Leverage the SBIR/STTR program to acquire advanced, innova:ve technology solu:ons that provide enhanced capabili:es for Special Opera:ons Forces (SOF) to successfully accomplish their missions. Uniqueness: The United States Special Opera:ons Command (USSOCOM) SBIR/STTR office seeks technologies across a wide spectrum of technology areas reflec:ng the highly dynamic capability requirements of SOF. USSOCOM also assists companies in promo:ng their opportunity through Technical Experimenta:on (TE) events and through the Technical Industrial Liaison Office (TILO). Annual Budget: SBIR/STTR Budget of Approximately $11 million Topics: Average of 7 SBIR Topics per FY Awards ( # and range): 3 SBIR Phase I awards (up to $150K each), 7 SBIR Phase II awards (up to $1.5M), and 1 STTR—on average per FY. Contract vs. Grant: Contracts SolicitaOons (Open/Close): USSOCOM SBIR par:cipates in the first DoD solicita:on of a fiscal year (usually published on FEDBISOPPS in November). Department of Agriculture SBIR Program • 
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POC/Title and or Ins=tute/Website: Charles Cleland, SBIR Na1onal Program Leader-­‐ www.nifa.usda.gov/fo/sbir Mission/interest -­‐ Support innova1ve research & development projects that deal with some aspect of American agriculture or rural development. Uniqueness -­‐ USDA SBIR program u1lizes confiden1al peer review to evaluate all proposals with reviewers drawn from the public sector. The Phase II review process u1lizes both technical and commercializa1on reviewers Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR budget ~$21M Topics -­‐ Forests and Related Resources ; Plant Produc1on and Protec1on – Biology; Plant Produc1on and Protec1on – Engineering; Animal Produc1on and Protec1on; Air, Water and Soils; Food Science and Nutri1on; Rural and Community Development; Aquaculture; Biofuels and Biobased Products; and Small and Mid-­‐Sized Farms Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ 70-­‐80 Phase I’s up to $100K and 25-­‐30 Phase II’s up to $450K Contract vs Grant -­‐ Grants Solicita=ons (Open/Close) – For FY 2015 it will open in June, 2014 and close on October 2, 2014 Commercializa=on Assistance -­‐ (Include if you have a program in this area) For Phase I, LARTA offers training on how to write a strong commercializa1on plan that is a cri1cal part of a Phase II proposal. For Phase II, LARTA provides commercializa1on assistance that starts with a two day mee1ng in Washington, DC followed by a series of webinars and consulta1ons with a commercializa1on advisor who focuses the program on the specific needs of the Phase II grantee. • 
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Program Manager: CAPT Sean Biggerstaff
Program Coordinator: Mr. JR Myers ([email protected], 301-619-7377)
Support Contractor: Mr. Aaron Sparks ([email protected], 301-619-5047)
Technical Assistance Advocate: Ms. Colleen Gibney ([email protected], 301-619-3719)
Mission: The Defense Medical Research and Development Program’s (DMRDP) mission is to conduct requirements-driven and
innovative medical research and development to address existing and evolving readiness-related capability gaps in the Department of
Defense. The program’s goal is to meet Joint warfighter readiness requirements, to help solve the challenges of today and tomorrow, and
to support force health protection and medical readiness.
Uniqueness: DMRDP is the only Joint Medical R&D program for the DoD. The program was established in 2010 to help bridge the gap
between basic science and transition and translation of research into clinical practice, mature medical products, and training and
operations. The program covers broad medical needs in the areas of Combat Casualty Care, Operational Medicine, Medical Modeling
and Simulation, Infectious Disease, and Rehabilitative Medicine.
Annual Budget: FY14 - $43.2M
Average Topics per Year: 15
Contracts vs Grant: Contract
Phase I: $150,000 over 6 months
Phase II: $1,000,000 over 24 months
Phase II Enhancement: DHP SBIR has a Phase II Enhancement Program, which provides matching SBIR funds to expand an existing
Phase II that attracts investment funds from a DoD Acquisition Program or Private Sector Investments. For further details please refer to
http://www.acq.osd.mil/osbp/sbir.
Technology Areas of Interest: Medical Training and Health Information Sciences, Military Infectious Diseases, Military Operational
Medicine, Combat Casualty Care, and Clinical and Rehabilitative Medicine
DHP SBIR Solicitations: XX.1 Solicitation. The next DHP SBIR Solicitation will be the 2015.1 Solicitation. For further details please
register with www.acq.osd.mil/osbp/sbir.
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DoC Na'onal Ins'tute of Standards and Technology (NIST) SBIR Program Clague, NIST SBIR Program Manager – email: POC/Title and or Ins'tute/Website: Mary [email protected] website: www.nist.gov/sbir Mission/interest -­‐ NIST's mission is to promote U.S. innovaFon and industrial compeFFveness by advancing measurement science, standards, and technology in ways that enhance economic security and improve our quality of life. Uniqueness -­‐ SolicitaFon topics vary widely and change annually. Past topics include: bioscience, building and fire research, chemistry, cybersecurity, energy, healthcare, IT, manufacturing, materials science, nanotechnology, and physics. Budget -­‐ Annual SBIR ~$2.5M Topics -­‐ Average 15 SBIR Topics per year Awards (Amt and Dollar Range) -­‐ Average 10 Phase I’s up to $100K each and 5 Phase II’s up to $300K each. Contract vs Grant -­‐ Grant Solicita'on – Opens February, closes 75 days later. Commercializa'on Assistance -­‐ NIST offers commercializaFon assistance to its awardees.