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基本説明
Provides real evidence of the challenges of entrepreneurship, innovation, technology transfer, raising finance etc.
Full Description
Magnetic Venture is the inside story of Oxford Instruments, the first substantial spin-off company from Oxford University, established in 1959. Written by one of its founders, it describes the ups and downs, the mistakes and successes of a growing science-based company. Over four decades Oxford Instruments grew from its small beginnings in a garden shed to an international company pioneering developments in superconductivity and medical instruments. It has been rightly celebrated as one of Britain's business successes, and became the role model for many later spin-offs.
Although the environment for new technology companies has changed much since the early 1960s, many of the problems and challenges for growing science-based firms remain the same. Audrey Wood both tells an exciting story of endeavour and risk-taking, and touches on many issues of importance for today's entrepreneurs. Among these are: the nature of innovation, technology transfer, R&D strategies, marketing, sources of investment, entrepreneurship, university-industry relations, changes in cultural attitudes, management styles, growth cycles, and problems of acquisitions and mergers.
Magnetic Venture explains how scientific novelties were developed into important products. The first was superconductivity, from which the company developed magnets for research, magnets for unravelling the structures of molecules in the design of new drugs, and, best known to the public, magnets for body-scanning. The final chapter looks in detail at the Oxford Trust and tells how this organization has been instrumental in promoting a better environment for the formation and incubation of new science-based companies.
The story will appeal to many business academics and researchers, advisers and policy makers, the new breed of scientist/entrepreneur, and those interested in important scientific developments such as superconductivity, ultra-low temperatures, and magnetic imaging.
Contents
Chapter 1: First Steps ; Chapter 2: The Superconductor Breakthrough ; Chapter 3: The Juvenile Company ; Chapter 4: Triumphs and Trials ; Chapter 5: The Slow Climb from the Morass ; Chapter 6: Medilog ; Chapter 7: Magnets for Modelling Molecules ; Chapter 8: Where is the Company Going? ; Chapter 9: Making the Human Body Transparent ; Chapter 10: What of the Rest of the Group? ; Chapter 11: Strategies for the Future ; Chapter 12: The Road to Flotation ; Chapter 13: The New Public Company ; Chapter 14: Seeds for Future Growth ; Chapter 15: Boom Years ; Chapter 16: 1987 ; Chapter 17: The Renaissance of Oxford Magnet Technology ; Chapter 18: Link Scientific and a New Japanese Initiative ; Chapter 19: Helios - a Product Ahead of its Time? ; Chapter 20: Through the Long Recession ; Chapter 21: Issues of the Nervous Nineties ; Chapter 22: Towards the End of an Era ; Chapter 23: The Beginning of a New Era ; Chapter 24: Bridges, Networks, and Nurseries ; Afterword by Richard Coopey