Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

TR Editors' blog

Insights, opinions, and our editors' analysis of the latest in emerging technologies.

Blog Topics

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

  • medison : Have you considered Green Damn It and biz as usual in China?  Mandatory. Not mandatory. Mandatory...
  • jmaximus9 : The only thing this will do is send the last vestige of American manufacturing to China and...
  • gognod : Why should an employee have to spend an extra 2.5 hours a week at the office and not get paid for...
  • chir0pter : hahahaha
  • jjbaulikki : "While cautioning that the Berlin case could be a fluke" well of course it could be a Fluke
  • plasticdoc : Even though US politicians are aware of European failures in similar policies,they will repeat...
  • Siroilas : I hope you were not serious about altering the gene expression of animals just to create more...
  • danbloom : Do we need a new word for the kind of reading we do on a screen?  by Danny Bloom OPED  "Do we...
  • ... : Hopefully the use of composites in structural elements is not a mistake, but thanks for catching...
  • ... : although the 787 is the first to use composites for a majority of the critical aircraft surfaces...
Advertisement
Thursday, September 27, 2007

Starting Up HP Labs

The new director wants to model HP Labs on university spinoffs.
By Kevin Bullis

One of the world's most storied corporate research labs--the lab that brought the world the pocket scientific calculator, the inkjet printer, the first commercial LED, and, more recently, experimental molecular-logic gates--just got a new director. And after only a few weeks on the job, he's planning a major shake-up.

The new director is Prith Banerjee, a longtime academic researcher and a serial entrepreneur. He plans to cut most of the research projects under way at HP Labs, the IT giant's research arm, and introduce changes that he hopes will improve the transfer of tech from the labs into products.

He'll begin by paring down the number of projects from 150 to just 30 over the next five years, while bringing in new projects at the rate of five or six per year. The cutbacks won't necessarily mean job cuts, as researchers will be shuffled into new groups after their pet projects disappear. Banerjee says that the regrouping is already happening: research groups are starting to form alliances, and researchers are mailing in proposals that they be transferred to specific projects. "People want to be aligned with the winners," he observes.

His plan for improving tech transfer from the labs seems to revolve around the idea of establishing temporary organizations within HP that he calls "incubation labs" or "mini-startups"; they will be modeled on his experience starting two tech companies: Binachip and Accelchip. As an academic researcher, Banerjee had been frustrated that, even when he gave away his research software to established companies, the software didn't make it to market. The companies didn't seem to know what to do with it. So he decided to start his own companies. "In those startups," he says, "I transferred the people--the graduate students--along with the technology, and brought in outside people who knew how to build products. And that made it successful."

"Researchers are good at innovation, but they don't know how to make products," he explains. At the same time, "businesspeople know how to make products, but they're incremental improvements to their current product line." The secret, Banerjee says, is to bring them together. "When you take the best of both worlds--the innovation and the product expertise--you have an amazing combination."

Here's how he sees this working at HP. Research projects will last about five years before they're dissolved, and the people and assets are redistributed to other groups (which sounds a lot like graduate studies). If, during that time, a project happens to make a promising prototype, this will trigger the formation of an incubation lab. For a period of 12 to 18 months, researchers from the project will be freed from their obligations to do research and publish. And select sales and marketing personnel from the business side will be freed from their obligations to keep current products selling well. The two groups will then sit down and figure out how to make the prototype a sellable product.

Overall, Banerjee wants to mimic the process of spinning a company out of an academic lab, except for the hassle of raising venture capital. Researchers will have the rewarding experience of seeing a project through, from beginning to product launch, and then they can pick up with another interesting research group at HP and start again. Banerjee hopes that this setup, along with new internship programs for putting PhD students in direct contact with HP researchers, will attract some of the best and brightest researchers, and ultimately make HP Labs more productive.

Advertisement

Comments

Advertisement

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement
Technology Review July/August 2009

Current Issue

Search Me
Inside the launch of Stephen Wolfram’s new “computational knowledge engine.”
•  Subscribe
Save 41%
•  Table of Contents
•  MIT News
» Gift Subscription
» Digital Subscription
» Reprints, Back Issues
» Subscribe
» Table of Contents
» MIT News

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.