Registration Open for Spring 2025 NSF I-Corps Innovation Course

Nov. 27, 2024, 3 p.m.

person standing with microphone in front of screen
Olutosin (Tosin) Alabi G’25 (Martin J. Whitman School of Management), founder of Diabetech, completed the course in Fall 2024

Syracuse University is hosting a free, virtual National Science Foundation Innovation Corps (NSF I-Corps) regional course from February 10 to March 12, 2025. Applications are being accepted until January 15, 2025. The course is open to teams from academic institutions, research organizations and innovation hubs to empower researchers with the tools, skills and strategies needed to bring tech innovations to market. Space is limited and Syracuse University faculty and student researchers are strongly encouraged to apply.

Course Highlights:

The NSF I-Corps program is nationally recognized for helping researchers bridge the gap between laboratory discoveries and commercial applications. Through hands-on activities and expert mentorship, participants will engage in the critical process of customer discovery, learning to identify the best product-market fit for their technology or research project. The program opens the door to government grant programs such as NSF SBIR/STTR (fund investments of up to $2 million with no equity to help bring research to market), as well as private investments.

The program includes a combination of live virtual sessions and one-on-one meetings offering teams an opportunity to receive additional guidance from the course instructors and refine their discoveries.

Participants will gain:

Schedule:

One-hour virtual class sessions are offered at convenient times for participants. Two days are scheduled for 1:1 mentoring sessions.

About the NSF I-Corps Program:

The NSF Innovation Corps (I-Corps) is a program designed to help researchers in the STEM fields transition from fundamental research to the commercialization of their ideas. Through a national network of training programs and partnerships, I-Corps provides the knowledge and skills needed to evaluate the commercial potential of scientific and technological innovations.

The course is offered through Syracuse University as a partner in the Interior Northeast I-Corps Hub (IN I-Corps), funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), led by Cornell University, with other collaborators, including Dartmouth College, Rochester Institute of Technology, SUNY Binghamton, SUNY Buffalo, University of Pittsburgh, University of Rochester, University of Vermont and West Virginia University. The hub is part of the National Innovation Network, connecting researchers, entrepreneurial communities and federal agencies to help commercialize research.

More information:

NSF I-Corps programming is being co-led by Linda Dickerson Hartsock, strategic initiatives advisor, Syracuse University Libraries; Jeff Fuchsberg, director, Syracuse Center for Advanced Systems and Engineering (CASE); and Cristiano Bellavitis, assistant professor of entrepreneurship at the Martin J. Whitman School of Management who serves as project research lead. Whitman Interim Dean Alex McKelvie serves as PI for the University’s NSF I-Corps grant.

For more information about the upcoming NSF I-Corps course email:

Linda Dickerson Hartsock, Ldhart01@syr.edu or Jeff Fuchsberg, Jrfuchsb@syr.edu;

Previous Next