What is it about?

University technology transfer offices (TTOs) support the creation and subsequent growth of university spin-offs (USOs) as a part of their “third mission.” This study empirically analyzed the impact of TTO involvement on USO bankruptcy from a social capital perspective. Using Cox proportional hazards model survival analysis, it revealed that close business relationships, customer introduction, market/customer knowledge sharing, and technology knowledge sharing with USOs significantly negatively affected their bankruptcy. None of the models promoted USO bankruptcy at any of the stages from relationship building to resource provision, aligning with the assumptions from the social capital perspective. The results revealed three vectors for effective TTO involvement in preventing USO bankruptcy: (1) professionalism in relationship building, (2) knowledge-based involvement, and (3) customer-oriented resource provision.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

The findings highlight the relationship between TTO involvement and USO bankruptcy from the social capital perspective, thus bridging a gap in the literature.

Perspectives

TTOs must recruit and promote specialists who have a professional mindset, consistently maintain professional business relationships with USOs, have experience and knowledge, and are customer oriented. USOs must seek other meaningful relationship building opportunities and stimulate self-help efforts if TTOs lack supporting capabilities and remain unwilling to help.

Tetsuya Kirihata
Ritsumeikan Daigaku

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Impact of technology transfer offices on university spin-off bankruptcy, The Journal of Technology Transfer, August 2024, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/s10961-024-10129-y.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page