Biotech Bigwig, Steve Burrill, Brings National Profile to Local Conference

Steve Burrill, the San Francisco-based merchant banker with one of the best Rolodexes in the life sciences industry, is getting serious about Seattle. And his name and connections might be just the thing to help lift the Northwest’s annual biotech investing conference out of obscurity.

Burrill & Co. made it official yesterday that it has agreed to sign on as a sponsor and partner on Life Sciences Innovation Northwest, the regional biotech showcase that the Washington Biotechnology & Biomedical Association organizes every year in March.

This means Burrill, an in-demand public speaker, will deliver one of his trademark keynote talks on the state of the biotech industry. More importantly, his organization will provide money and organizational horsepower to help draw a crowd of national biotech players—something that’s never easy in this soggy corner of the country in March.

“There’s a lot of strength in the Pacific Northwest,” Burrill said yesterday, phoning from Paris. “This is a way for us to be connected into an enormous band of technology that stretches from north of the San Francisco Bay to Vancouver, BC.”

Burrill added that while his organization is “geographically agnostic,” he’s drawn to the Northwest partly because of its computing expertise, as IT becomes more vital to life sciences in the genomics age. While Burrill has organized events in other parts of the Northwest in the past—including Portland, OR, last year—this is the first time he’s thrown his energy into a conference in the Seattle biotech cluster.

Steve Burrill
Steve Burrill

For those who are unfamiliar, Burrill has been analyzing, prognosticating, investing, dealmaking, speaking, and writing about biotech for more than two decades. His organization has more than $950 million under management to invest in drugs, devices, diagnostics, agricultural biotech, and biomaterials. Every year, Burrill & Co. hosts an event for top industry CEOs in Laguna Beach, CA. Just two weeks ago at the JP Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco—the biggest public biotech investing event of the year—Burrill hosted a reception that drew more than 1,000 people.

That sort of high-powered networking has been only a dream for the folks at the WBBA, who have been trying for years to raise the profile of the local biotech scene, and have struggled to put the local investing event on the national map.

“This helps validate life sciences here,” says Chris Rivera, head of the WBBA.

Last year, Rivera’s first as WBBA president, the conference drew a little more than 700 attendees to the Seattle waterfront. Even though the economy looked grim, the conference had

Author: Luke Timmerman

Luke is an award-winning journalist specializing in life sciences. He has served as national biotechnology editor for Xconomy and national biotechnology reporter for Bloomberg News. Luke got started covering life sciences at The Seattle Times, where he was the lead reporter on an investigation of doctors who leaked confidential information about clinical trials to investors. The story won the Scripps Howard National Journalism Award and several other national prizes. Luke holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and during the 2005-2006 academic year, he was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT.