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Digital RESI Investors Show Strong Interest in Therapeutics

23 Apr

By Dennis Ford, Founder & CEO, Life Science Nation; Creator of RESI Conference Series

RESI’s partnering platform is unique in its ability to filter and sort through investor and company profiles, allowing both companies and investors to find partners who are match for them. The partnering system increases the value for attendees participating in our events, eliminating wasted meetings discovering that you are not a fit for each other.

As an example, one of our fundraising CEOs, who has a blood-based technology in an orphan indication, asked us to look up investors who are interested in diseases affecting the blood, in combination with those investing in orphan diseases. At this up and coming Digital RESI event next week we found that of the 250 investors that 141 will look at investing in therapeutics treating diseases of the blood, presenting a terrific opportunity to connect with quite a few investors interested in that space. But there are subtleties here, because investors come in several flavors: those who are very specific in their investment interests, of which we found 37, and those who are opportunistic, 104 investors who seek compelling technology and look more broadly at the early technology assets that surface on their radar screen.

However, the benefit to companies improves greatly by employing the LSN Investor database in addition to participation in RESI events. Doing the same search in the Investor Platform yields 1439 investors interested in therapeutics treating blood diseases. It is even possible to narrow that down further, with a result of 311 investors that are interested in therapeutics treating orphan blood disorders. This kind of granularity is what makes LSN’s services so powerful, and so useful.

Trying to connect with investors? Register for our upcoming Digital RESI events and demo our investor database. Who knows what you will find?

Digital RESI “Europe” Recap: Virtual Big Pharma Panelists Share Their Insights

23 Apr

By Claire Jeong, Vice President of Investor Research, Asia BD, LSN

claire

As many readers know, LSN organized its inaugural digital RESI “Europe” conference last month. RESI had a digital agenda in place, which included various panels & workshops, Innovation Challenge finalists, and Featured Company Pitch Sessions. One of the panels LSN organized was “Big Pharma”, a popular session that is included at almost every RESI conference.

Large pharmaceuticals continue to play a key role in the early-stage biotech ecosystem by actively scouting and fostering external innovation, orchestrating various types of partnership models to work with novel science. Last year, there were notable partnerships such as Gilead’s deal with Goldfinch Bio for their kidney disease pipeline, or Roche’s deal with Skyhawk Therapeutics for developing small molecule therapies that modulate RNA splicing, in CNS and oncology. For an emerging startup, the implications of partnering with global pharma are tremendous and they are always highly sought after at RESI.

So how can people successfully engage with global, large pharmaceutical groups? For many companies, the entire process may seem daunting. The Big Pharma panel organized at the last RESI covered perspectives of various organizations, represented by the following panelists:

  • Murali Gopalakrishnan, Sr. Director, Head Search & Evaluation Neuroscience, AbbVie (Moderator)
  • Arpita Maiti, Executive Director & Global Head, Inflammation & Immunology, ES&I, Pfizer
  • Chris Church, Manager, Search & Evaluation, CVRM, AstraZeneca
  • Mark Day, VP Research & Emerging Sciences, Otsuka Pharmaceuticals
  • Elena Ritsou, Global Head Oncology Business Development, Ipsen S.A.

Some key takeaways:

Having the whole package – great science, management team, supporting materials. All groups really are open to companies of all stages of development, as long as the science they are working on is compelling. Most of the represented groups are open to considering various types of modalities, while Ipsen has more focused interests, mainly focusing on small molecule therapeutics. Some groups delved into more specific technology areas of interest, such as Pfizer’s expertise and research into nanoparticles and AstraZeneca’s interest in technologies that increase oral bioavailability of peptides.

As long as the company is supported by a clear and well-organized pitch deck and other supplementary materials, you can expect a positive initial response. It is also important to note that pharmaceuticals want to work with management teams who are willing to listen and adapt to their constructive feedback, meeting suggested timelines, etc.

Identify the right people to reach out to. Business units are organized based on therapeutic area. Colleagues who are responsible for business development and external research/collaboration attend many partnering conferences beyond BIO and JPM. Of course, pharma also regularly participate in major scientific conferences such as AACR, so it is not difficult to find a representative from a pharma you are seeking to engage. Main communication is done through e-mail, so you can e-mail a contact you have recently met at a networking event or conference, or start a new outreach by navigating through the pharma’s partnering webpage.

Try to identify the right person to contact, instead of reaching out to the CEO or key senior executives from the start (unfortunately, this seems to happen more often than it should). Even if you do reach out them, the opportunity will trickle down to the appropriate business unit, not only making this an inefficient process for everyone involved but also leaving a bad impression. Arpita from Pfizer mentioned that it would take 1-2 weeks to get back, which sounds like a standard timeline for others as well.

Understanding creative partnership & collaboration models. Global pharmaceuticals are all taking novel approaches to identify and support early-stage technologies, and they value the importance of open collaboration. It would be a good idea to properly research into the big pharma partners with whom you are most keen to establish better connections. Many pharmaceuticals have established corporate venture funds to invest in technologies that have synergies with the pharma’s current R&D pipeline. On this panel, every pharma has their own venture funding platform with the exception of AstraZeneca. Other approaches can include partnering with existing assets in pharma’s platform and engaging in a research collaboration or non-dilutive funding-type of deal, option-type agreements, etc. An example is Pfizer’s Centers for Therapeutic Innovation (CTI), through which Pfizer collaborates with investigators and academia to accelerate promising research.

So when is an opportunity “too early”? There is no absolutely right answer to this question, as people have different perspectives in evaluating opportunities. But, most can agree on the fact that when an early-stage opportunity is dismissed and comes back later when there has been further clinical development, the deal will become more expensive and complicated to negotiate. Mark from Otsuka noted that simply telling companies to come back when they have proof of concept or better data is just an easy way out. If he identifies a compelling opportunity, he will find someone else in the company who could share the excitement and build a case. Elena from Ipsen mentioned that, as they have ceased in-house research in oncology and rare disease, they tend to partner with and have the capacity to engage at the candidate development stage. They don’t shy away from the earliest stage opportunities, engaging in option-type agreements and supporting companies during this period to get them to candidate development stage and beyond (i.e. in-licensing).

Digital RESI Website Launched: Check Out Featured Companies

23 Apr

By Gregory Mannix, Chief Conference Officer, Vice President International Business Development, LSN

The all-digital format is changing the way companies are showcasing themselves and drawing attention investors that are a fit for their stage development and product. RESI offers an inexpensive and compelling way to gain exposure via its Featured Company Forum. A company can enhance their global footprint by putting up their company information on a dedicated landing page.  This Featured Company Page can host a video, Executive Summary, PowerPoint, Poster Board or Tear Sheet which can easy be found by an interested potential partner.

Each logo will be clickable so attendees can view the Featured Company’s dedicated pages. There will also be a link on each Featured Company page that enables attendees to quickly request a meeting with the company on the RESI Partnering Platform. LSN wanted to dedicate space at Digital RESI to feature early stage life science companies in order to give regional-based firms some global reach at events that are bringing global investors and strategic partners seeking technology assets. Think of it…global reach from your home office!

Check out the Featured Companies!

Life Science Nation (LSN) Welcomes AdvaMed Members to the Digital Redefining Early Stage Investments (RESI) Partnering Event April 29th & 30th

16 Apr

200+ Medical Device, Diagnostic and Digital Health Investment Partners Will Virtually Gather @ Digital RESI

By Dennis Ford, Founder & CEO, Life Science Nation; Creator of RESI Conference Series

AdvaMed has partnered with Life Science Nation, the creator of the Digital Redefining Early Stage Investments (RESI) conference, to facilitate access for AdvaMed members to the upcoming Digital RESI 2-Day Partnering Event on April 29th – 30th

This partnering event will give AdvaMed members a chance to interact with 200+ investors and strategic partners, view their investment interests and request a 30-minute meeting that will be hosted on an integrated videoconferencing system. The digital partnering event will take place over 2 full days across four continents, from home offices, at any time you and the investment partner are available. The partnering software will synch up disparate time zones based on availability of each attendee’s meeting schedule.

AdvaMed members can also get additional visibility in the Featured Company Forum, having their own landing page on the conference website. If you are an AdvaMed member, please reach out to RESI@lifesciencenation.com for a discount code to register.

NEW! Featured Company Forum

16 Apr

By Gregory Mannix, Chief Conference Officer, Vice President International Business Development, LSN

As we have announced, April marks a new milestone for the RESI Conference Series with our first ever Digital RESI 2-Day Partnering Event taking place at the end of the month. Not being a full RESI conference means there is no Pitch Sessions, Innovation Challenge or Investor Panels, but companies who wish to get greater visibility can showcase their technology in our new Featured Company Forum on the event website. Your company logo in the Forum will redirect interested parties to your own landing page, allowing you to highlight your company with your 1-page data sheet, Executive Summary, Pitch Deck, etc.  See an example below.

If you are registered for the April event, you can add your company to the Forum for $250 Click Here to Apply.

Apply for the Digital RESI Innovation Challenge

16 Apr

By Karen Deyo, Senior Investor Research Analyst, LSN

Our Digital RESI taking place on June 8-10th is just around the corner, and companies will once again be able to showcase their technologies through the RESI Innovation Challenge. Companies can apply to participate, and the review team will use the LSN Expert System to select the 30 most ‘investable’ companies to be featured. Each company will have their own dedicated site to present their poster digitally, as well as any other non-confidential material they wish to share. These companies will compete for votes among RESI attendees, with the top three companies winning prizes. Click here to complete the application. Don’t wait too long, as the application deadline is May 6th!

 

 

 

 

Here’s The Plan: It Pays To Go Digital, ‘Till June

9 Apr

By Dennis Ford, Founder & CEO, Life Science Nation; Creator of RESI Conference Series

LSN had to pivot a few weeks ago and create Digital RESI Global Conference. The site remains open and anyone can see the gist of what LSN did on this “live” page. LSN could do this because we have done over 30 physical conferences and never outsourced any part of the conference except the 3rd party partnering software, to which we added a “matching module” that is unique to LSN. Because we had done our own program guides in the past, we had a lot of the formatting issues conquered for the digital version.  The difficulty at any event is the staff chasing down all the content for the program guide, including speaker bios, marketing collateral and company profiles etc. Always down to the wire.

Digital RESI Global doubled our predicted attendee turnout with investment partners and fundraising CEOs. The metrics are actually quite interesting and surprised us in revealing the pent up demand for action in the life science arena in these troubled times.  Partnering led the way and Panels, Workshops and Company Presentations did remarkably well. I never would have thought that these troubled times would have contributed to a new model that seems to be shifting the paradigm.