[Updated 12/12/11 11:20 am to clarify terms for startups. See below.] After spending much of her career in the tech sector, Melinda Richter has been pondering a provocative question for the life sciences industry.
“Billionaires are a dime a dozen in tech,” she says, “but it’s hard to find an entrepreneur in the life sciences who is a billionaire. I can’t think of a single small biotech company CEO who became a billionaire.”
Richter says she founded San Francisco-based Prescience International at least partly with the hope of addressing such inequities. Prescience helps start and manage life sciences incubators, institutes, and other research centers.
Mostly, though, Richter says she wants to make it possible for life sciences entrepreneurs to take advantage of the sort of low operating costs that make it so easy for a handful of tech entrepreneurs to start a Web 2.0 company with a few hundred thousand bucks. It’s that kind of minimal capital requirement that can enable biotech entrepreneurs to prove their concept, giving them something more than a business plan when they seek venture funding. The low-cost model might even help entrepreneurs hold onto a bigger ownership stake in their startups.
“You look at these IT companies,” she says. “You give a couple of guys a couple hundred thousand, and after a couple of months they’ve got a new iPhone app and they’re ready for business. But it’s not curing cancer or HIV.”
So Richter was on the ground floor, so to speak, as executive director when the San Jose Redevelopment Agency spent $6.5 million to start the San Jose BioCenter, a life sciences incubator that opened in 2004. The BioCenter officially hired Prescience to manage the facility in 2005, and Prescience took over management of a cleantech incubator, the San Jose Environmental Business Cluster, in 2009.
Now Prescience is in San Diego. Johnson & Johnson has hired Richter’s firm to manage the incubator it has been creating at its San Diego R&D facility, now known as the Janssen Labs at San Diego. Under a plan unveiled in October, J&J plans to host 18 to 20 startups at its new innovation center, which has various size wet labs and offices for individual companies, and common areas for shared use. Janssen Labs has emphasized that space in its innovation center comes with no strings attached. The startups that enroll will not be required to give up an equity stake or intellectual property rights. They simply have to pay a monthly fee under a 90-day lease agreement.
When we met recently, Richter told me she got into the business partly for personal reasons.
After graduating from the University of Saskatchewan (she is a Canadian), Richter joined Nortel Networks, where she says she spent more than eight years on a fast-track executive program that took her to corporate posts in the United States, Europe (she got her MBA in France), Latin America, and China.
While in China, however, Richter had what you might call a life-altering experience. She says she got very sick and was