| Massachusetts Institute of Technology visits Ingeniatrics. |
| Monday, 21 June 2010 14:48 |
|
William Aulet, Managing Director at MIT Entrepreneurial Center.
During MIT’s Delegation stay in Seville they visited the most relevant innovative companies and university spin-offs – Ingeniatrics amongst them, on Monday 21st -. The Entrepreneurship Capacity Assessment Team, ECAT, is led by William Aulet, head of the MIT Entrepreneur Center, MITEC, and expects to attain firsthand data on Andalucia innovation ecosystem.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology is well known for very likely the most part of living Nobel-awarded scientists works at the MIT. Were MIT and its spin-off companies a country economy, it would be one the 20 biggest in the planet.
William Aulet’s multidisciplinary ECA Team encompasses a wide range of technological knowledge and is integrated by five experts on technology transference: William Aulet himself being knowledgeable on Management, Mercedes Delgado-García on Strategy and Competitiveness, Fiona E. Murray on Innovation, Scott Stern on Strategy, all of them linked to famous MIT Sloan School of Management, and Christopher Walti on Business Management. Mr. Stern and Mrs. Delgado were member of Michel Porter’s team in a study on industry clusters. William and Christopher visited Ingeniatrics to conduct a thorough interview on key success factors and constrains for innovative entrepreneurship at Andalucia, and about Ingeniatrics case specifically.
They have been received by regional government ministry representatives and showed to a number of innovative companies. At Ingeniatrics, they were received by Alfonso Ganan, chairman, Angel Cebolla vice-president and Joaquin Gomez Moya, CEO, who emphasized the bond between Ingeniatrics and the University of Seville.
MITEC has targeted five regions in the world where its Clean Technology Research Center could be settled. Andalucia advantages to be chosen for any foreign direct investment were highlighted by last fDi Magazine – Financial Times group - European Cities & Regions of the Future 2010/11 Report.
Ingeniatrics Technologies owns a 50-patents portfolio and was founded on 2001 by a Spaniard scientists group led by Alfonso Ganan who has been recently appointed Chairman. Ingeniatrics is running a number of relevant changes in few months. It has appointed Joaquin Gomez Moya as CEO and General Manager. Ingeniatrics is about to launch its user-friendly Flow Focusing microencapsulation device, Cell-ENA. Lately, other significant milestones were the achievement of a global agreement with Varian Inc., Melbourne, now Agilent Technologies, to integrate its analytic nebulizer OneNeb as part of its ICP technology equipment. And the foundation of Ingeniatrics Global LLC, a US headquartered Joint Venture to exploit potential fields of Flow Blurring and Flow Focusing technologies.
|