Georgia Institute of Technology issued the following announcement on Sept. 26.
Roughly 275. That’s how many jobs the company Stord has brought to the state of Georgia since it opened its doors in 2016. The startup was one of the first to go through Georgia Tech’s CREATE-X incubator, offering cloud-based software that has since revolutionized the supply chain sector. And as the company continues to grow, it has no plans to leave Atlanta.
“One of the best things we've done to give back to Georgia is the way Stord has accelerated the overall technology ecosystem, mostly as it pertains to venture, and beyond that, just bringing more capital to the market,” said Sean Henry, CEO and co-founder of Stord.
It’s not just Stord that’s giving back to the state. Georgia Tech’s economic impact on the state of Georgia was $4 billion in fiscal year 2020, according to data recently released by the University System of Georgia.
Companies like SalesLoft, Greenlight, and Pindrop all graduated from Georgia Tech’s Advanced Technology Development Center (ATDC) — the state’s oldest technology incubator — and have stayed headquartered in Atlanta, infusing millions in capital and thousands of jobs into the state economy. Other startup programs on campus include VentureLab, Partnership for Inclusive Innovation, ENGAGE, and the Global Center for Medical Innovation, to name a few, helping students and faculty set up companies based on creative ideas and technological innovation.
Georgia Tech’s reputation as a leader in producing successful startups is further solidified by faculty research commercialization. Carbice and Sila Nanotechnologies were developed directly from the research of faculty members Baratunda Cola and Gleb Yushin, respectively, and both companies focus on providing energy alternatives to businesses and consumers. Mark Prausnitz’s microneedle technology developed at Georgia Tech has led to four different companies in the Atlanta area, employing 40 people.
“Georgia Tech provides fertile ground for inventing and developing technologies. The research provides excellent training for students, and the technologies have the promise of serving patients and growing the economy,” said Prausnitz, Regents’ Professor and J. Erskine Love Chair in the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. “As the biotech industry in Georgia continues to grow, there is an accelerating feedback loop that stimulates more research, more investments, and more successful companies.”
Technology transfer and research commercialization are a strategic focus for Georgia Tech, with Raghupathy “Siva” Sivakumar newly serving as the Institute’s chief commercialization officer.
“As someone who's taken advantage of the Georgia Tech commercialization ecosystem in the past as a faculty entrepreneur, it still surprises me how rich it is, and that gives me great optimism for the road ahead,” said Sivakumar, who is also the co-founder and director of CREATE-X.
Georgia Tech is committed to putting research into action. In fiscal year 2021, the Institute brought in $1.2 billion in new grants and contracts for research and other sponsored activities. Of this amount, $781 million was granted to the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI), the applied research division of the Institute. The awards enable its eight labs to solve complex challenges for the U.S. federal government, the state, and industry. Some of that money goes toward innovations in agriculture across Georgia, including robots that assist with peach picking, poultry deboning, and crop monitoring, to name a few.
While many rural areas of Georgia are benefiting from Georgia Tech’s technologies, Atlanta itself has emerged as one of the nation’s capital cities for technology and startup innovation. Part of the region’s success with its technology ecosystem is Midtown’s Technology Square, with the highest density of startups, corporate innovators, and academic researchers in the southeastern U.S.
Stord’s headquarters sit right next to Tech Square, and Henry’s office window looks across the street to the Scheller College of Business, where he took his first classes at Georgia Tech. Just this year, Stord opened a 386,000-square-foot warehouse 20 miles outside of Atlanta, where it employs about 75 people who gain the benefits of a startup, including equity and paid time off programs, as well as the corporate culture and engagement that doesn’t typically come in an industrial environment.
“There’s a lot more employee loyalty in Georgia versus a place like Silicon Valley. They want to buy into a long-term mission and be part of something greater,” said Henry.
Last week, Stord reached a major milestone — a $1.1 billion valuation. For Henry, it’s a surreal moment, but mostly one colored by feelings of gratitude.
“I think the main feeling is gratitude, and at the same time, the feeling that you have to do more in the sense of looking for ways to continue to give back,” he said. “The amount of trust, focus, and support the Georgia Tech ecosystem will give you is incredible, and can propel you far if you utilize it correctly. But ultimately, then you have a large responsibility and goal to try to give back as much as you can.”
To discover more about the vast research enterprise and technology ecosystem of Georgia Tech, visit report.research.gatech.edu.
Original source can be found here.
Source: Georgia Institute of Technology