Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Dr. Glenn Prestwich

Involved in founding seven companies and now a mentor to other entrepreneurs, Glenn D. Prestwich, Presidential Professor of Medicinal Chemistry at the University of Utah, entered the business realm more than 20 years ago “kicking and screaming,” he says. He wasn’t driven by a passion for business to start one of his early companies, but he took on the added task to free his academic lab to focus on research.
Over the years, however, Prestwich, 63, has been able to combine what he likes to do—and, more important, the impact he wants to have as a chemist—with the formation and operation of small companies. And as the presidential special assistant for faculty entrepreneurism at Utah, he supports others working toward their entrepreneurial goals.
In the first half of his academic career, Prestwich was happy running a research group and using his synthetic chemistry abilities to help other scientists by providing compounds. In 1992, while at the State University of New York, Stony Brook, he was asked to head the university’s Center for Biotechnology. Despite his best efforts to avoid the job, he got it anyway.
“It wasn’t something that I set out to do, wanted to do, or thought I had any qualifications to do,” he says about running the center and helping the faculty start companies and grow the downstate New York biotech sector. “It was an uphill battle for me to go from being a scientist to being a guy who wore a suit.”
Nevertheless, Prestwich says he learned about how effective teams and businesses work, especially in tackling complex tasks. “You can’t do anything innovative and succeed unless you have a team,” he notes. During that time, he and partner James A. Hayward started Clear Solutions Biotech, which used technology from Prestwich’s lab for making hyaluronic acid derivatives. The business was eventually sold.
In 1996, Prestwich moved to Utah, excited about the prospect of getting back into research. Very soon after arriving, he and chemistry professor C. Dale Poulter were bemoaning the fact that their students and postdocs spent too much time fulfilling requests for specialty reagents.
“It was out of desperation that we started the first company in Utah so we could do research again, rather than just put powders in ampules,” Prestwich says. But clearly there was a customer need, and in 1997, Echelon Research Sciences began supplying biological assays and reagents. Now called Echelon Biosciences, the business is part of research chemical supplier Frontier Scientific.
By this time, Prestwich had learned “how to invent around my own patents.” Hyaluronan biomaterials became the basis of his next four companies. The first in 2003 was SentrX Surgical—which became Carbylan BioSurgery in 2005—from which offshoots SentrX Animal Care and Glycosan BioSystems were formed in 2006. Bioresearch product supplier BioTime purchased Glycosan in 2011. He founded the fourth company in 2008: GlycoMira Therapeutics is developing semi­synthetic glycosaminoglycan ethers as anti-inflammatory therapeutics.
At most of the companies, Prestwich initially served as chief scientific officer (CSO). “I like to get these companies going, but I don’t like to run things,” he says. Once R&D is established, he sees a natural transition “when they don’t need me as a CSO, but they need me as a science adviser,” he says. “I start out as the father and end up being the grandfather—somebody else is in charge on a day-to-day basis, and I come and give advice.”
On the basis of his experience, he would advise other prospective faculty entrepreneurs to keep their day jobs. “Faculty members are more effective at being innovative and creative than they are at managing a company, which is all about focus and execution, and that can be pretty boring,” he says. Instead, he suggests finding and working with seasoned managers who have the right skills.
Prestwich also sees great opportunities for faculty members and students to start businesses together. Preoccupied with other responsibilities, faculty members are “naturally risk averse,” he says. “On the other hand, students don’t have day jobs, and they require risk to get going and succeed. Together they make a great team and can make balanced decisions.”
As a mentor to faculty entrepreneurs, Prestwich has served as a board member or adviser to the companies they start. As an extension of this role, he now is chief executive officer of Metallosensors, which has licensed a Utah colleague’s technology to create handheld mercury detectors.
For Prestwich, the genesis of his companies has been market driven—identifying and fulfilling a customer’s need and helping to solve a problem. “The first half of my career was learning to do what I now know how to do,” he says, “and the second half is actually doing it and trying to make a difference.”

Monday, August 13, 2012

Camilla Zankowski Daniels

Just read the class blog. I too felt like Kate Wilbur who thought she had nothing to share. Not true. Beyond the scorching Summer "12 (corn crop lost in Ohio), there is wonderful news to share. After fourteen months of being unemployed, our older son has a position with the financial house Morgan Stanley Smith Barney. Forgive me for not knowing if and where commas should be placed in the company name. Ben and his wife are also expecting their second daughter in October. Fondly named, "Lady Bug Girl", by their older daugher, Ilsa, our second grandaughter is due on her older sister's 4th birthday. Ben is already dreading the teen years. However, Gina is not. As having taught middle school and now teaching high school, she's comfortable with teenagers. Perhaps our son is remembering some of the difficult times he gave his parents as a teenager.
Jerry & I took our first vacation in thirteen years, by joining our younger son, daughter-in-law, grandson, the other grandma and her best friend, in the Outer Banks, NC. Sharing an enormous house, listening to the ocean, eating seafood and learning history about another section of this country was wonderful. My favorite time of the day was sharing dinner with the seven of us. We're preparing for Chris, Jen and Jackson to make a visit in September for an Ohio State University home game. Yes, Kate it is against USC. Having them here from the Detroit, MI area is a treat. They will be returning for the OSU-Michigan game in November. Both Chris and Jen are OSU alumni. Spending time with people one loves and cares about is greater than anything in the world. I often remember something from the 45th reunion. I'm glad I came.
The rain has come too late this last weekend, but the heat has abated. Maybe lawn mowers will make an appearance soon. To everyone else who has had a hot, dry summer, you have not suffered alone. Their are many in your company. We will find solutions for this also.
Camilla

Friday, August 3, 2012

Phil Evans

 Celebrating our 40th wedding anniversary this summer, Nancy and I visited Copenhagen and Oslo for several days, then traveled across southern Norway to go by ship north into the fjords of the western coast. We passed a number of ports between Bergen and the arctic circle, arriving finally at Kirkenes which borders the tip of Russia. There was dramatic scenery and also some unusually warm weather during that final part of the trip. Along the way we were also able to visit our daughter Andrea and new son-in-law Todd, who were married last October in Michigan and are now living on the upper east side of Manhattan. Starting this fall she has a new teaching position in Rye, NY, while Todd works in the city.
This last January was special too for the family, with son Greg and daughter-in-law Karen having the birth of their first child, Ryan. An exciting time for everyone.