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Return to Virginia Business - December 2002

Center for Innovative Controversy
The original plan was for the Center for Innovative Technology to nurture tech startups. Instead, it has nurtured infighting. Can Newstrom straighten it out?

by Garry Kranz

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Housed in a glitzy headquarters building near Dulles Airport, Virginia’s Center for Innovative Technology symbolizes the state’s high hopes for high tech. Since it was formed in 1984, CIT has tried to help Virginia fertilize new sectors such as the Internet, advanced manufacturing, nanotechnology and biotechnology. Its backers credit it with helping the Old Dominion leapfrog from a backwater to an exciting spot in the highly competitive technology world.

Yet all along, CIT officials have been dogged by questions about what their center actually does for the state tax money it gets. CIT leadership has been unsteady, with regular turnovers. Most recently, president Anne Armstrong was forced out last summer in a Putsch engineered by George Newstrom, Virginia’s relatively new Secretary of Technology. And now, Peter Jobse, Armstrong’s successor and a former Newstrom protégé, is confronting yet another problem: the loss of $5 million, or 40 percent of its state funding, due to the state’s $2 billion budget shortfall. About 30 percent of CIT’s workers were let go, many of them program directors. What's more, in November a commission on government efficiency headed by former governor L. Douglas Wilder urged CIT be reorganized, saying it lacked a clear mission.

Nor is 2003 likely to bring much relief. Newstrom says the new year could determine CIT’s survival. The challenge, he says, is to jump-start CIT’s impact on the state in a business-like way. It must take its remaining $8 million in state funding and parlay it into a $350 million impact to Virginia in jobs, economic expansion and new research activity.

Ambitious? You bet. Indeed, some wonder if the goals are realistic. “It makes you wonder if CIT isn’t being set up to fail,” says Jeffrey Payne, president of Dulles-based software company Cigital, whose company relied on CIT’s help to win federal research contracts worth $4 million.

Newstrom, a hard-charging ex-Marine, vows that CIT’s failure won’t come without consequences. He insists that private-sector business practices be imposed on state government. His predecessor, Donald A. Upson, preached a similar gospel, but the difference may be in the insistence that certain revenue goals be met. As with other state agencies, every employee at CIT has a circumscribed set of tasks to accomplish, with “scorecards” for marking progress. This is all part of the new strategic technology plan authored by Newstrom’s office. CIT has been placed on the fast track: by October 2003 Newstrom expects to see interim goals met “or maybe we should revisit the need for (keeping) CIT.”

Ouch. For CIT staffers already reeling, that can’t be comforting news. To be sure, Newstrom is no shrinking violet. Since becoming Secretary of Technology in March, he has taken controversial steps, such as overseeing the ouster of the popular president Armstrong. A former editor-in-chief of Federal Computer Week, Armstrong had valuable connections in the federal information-technology services sector. This was a chief reason why she was hired by Newstrom’s predecessor, Donald A. Upson, who served when Republican Jim Gilmore was governor.

Apparently, Armstrong didn’t fit the mold of the business-savvy Newstrom, who spent nearly three decades as an executive with Electronic Data Services Corp. (EDS), a huge IT firm with a major presence in Northern Virginia. Officially, the decision to replace Armstrong was made by CIT’s board of directors. Yet Newstrom makes no secret that he agrees with the move. “This is no reflection on Anne, but we needed a strong, business-minded individual — someone who is familiar with the structure of companies and who’s been involved with technology transfer,” Newstrom says. To replace Armstrong, CIT hired Jobse, a former colleague of Newstrom’s at EDS.
Armstrong, who declined to be interviewed, says she wishes CIT “only the best.” Some speculate the deep budget cuts, perhaps even Armstrong’s unceremonious departure, were political payback by some legislators angry at former Gov. Gilmore for raiding CIT’s budget to fund conferences and other activities of Upson’s office. Newstrom will have none of it. He denies politics had anything to do with the decision. Warner, his boss, is a Democrat, and refers to Armstrong as a good friend.

Still, there’s no denying that CIT can be a political lightning rod. Armstong’s predecessor, the widely respected Robert Templin, suffered a similar fate in 1999. During his five-year tenure, Templin implemented numerical benchmarks — a harbinger of what Newstrom wants to do — to gauge the agency’s success so its funding could be justified. Templin is credited with polishing CIT’s image and sharpening its focus as a high-tech tool for Virginia’s economy. None of that was enough to prevent Templin from being sacked after losing a messy power struggle to Upson, who reportedly disdained Templin’s number-crunching methodology for benchmarking progress.

Although all state agencies are nonprofits, CIT is different in taking state tax money and converting it into tangible economic benefits to Virginia. This bottom-line orientation is what repeatedly keeps CIT in the cross hairs of legislators, especially in tumultuous election seasons. The agency has dodged budgetary bullets before, the last time in the early 1990s. Proponents of CIT complain that using the budget review process to judge CIT’s impact is ineffective at best. Much of CIT’s payoff to Virginia, they point out, isn’t seen right away. Federal research awards, like the ones CIT helped Cigital win, typically get paid out over multiple years, based on triggers in the contracts. “Budgets, politics, cost cutting — those are not return-on-investment things,” says Douglas Koelemay, chief policy analyst with McLean-based Williams Mullen Strategies and a longtime CIT observer.
Aside from helping companies win grants or matching university research with companies in the private sector, CIT has developed a number of industry groups. Its Virginia Link program was set up to help Virginia companies, especially in rural areas, get needed broadband services. The program’s aim is to find carriers that will provide broadband and other high-speed telecommunications services. Although ambitious, the program has not been met with enthusiasm. Only a few hundred companies have signed up for services though Virginia Link, and not all services are available in all areas.

CIT also has sponsored industry conferences on burgeoning sectors like biotechnology, nanotechnology and advanced materials. These conferences, which draw companies from around the world, often focus on getting university-based research from labs to the commercial sector. Businesses, especially entrepreneurial start-ups, rely on CIT’s financing and funding programs, as well as its databases of intellectual property and high-tech employment.

CIT also gets loaded with too many tasks, sometimes without being given the resources to accomplish them. The resulting “Johnny Appleseed strategy” splinters resources and causes the organization to be pulled in too many directions at once. It also leads to constant reshuffling. “The governor’s office has to come out and say, ‘This is our strategy for CIT.’ Pick two or three things, build critical mass and create a process that is sustainable,” says Fred Williamson, a private management consultant who served as Upson’s deputy secretary of technology.

In fact, that is exactly what Jobse has been hired to do. His immediate focus is on carrying out three main goals. First, state-sponsored universities have been directed to form a consortium to try and win $72 million in new federal research contracts. By bidding collectively, Jobse thinks universities can land “five to 10 times more” than if they bid individually. Leading the universities’ effort is Leonard Ferrari, vice provost for special initiatives at Virginia Tech. Second, CIT is focusing on helping universities match their research with industrial partners. The goal: to generate $25 million in licensing royalties for new commercial products. Those first two objectives fold neatly into a third: producing a net gain of $250 million in economic development to Virginia, including new jobs and companies.

Those goals echo the slogan CIT originally adopted following its creation by the General Assembly nearly 20 years ago: to foster “jobs, companies and competitiveness.” Nor is the theme of privatization new; Upson preached a similar gospel. Williamson, for one, is skeptical CIT will be able to accomplish such lofty tasks, especially with decreased funding. “Ask any venture capitalist if it’s possible to take $8 million and turn it into $350 million in one year, and they’ll laugh you out of the room.”

Jobse, who has nearly 25 years of running private companies, agrees the numbers may need to be revised slightly. The original $350 million payoff was based on CIT’s receiving funding of $9.2 million in 2003, but Warner’s draconian measures to patch the state budget shaved off nearly $1.5 million, reducing CIT’s total to about $8 million But Jobse insists the tasks can be accomplished by changing how CIT is managed. He especially hawks benchmarks such as revenue targets that will be used to gauge CIT’s performance. “We want to manage CIT,” says the 45-year-old Jobse, “to get the best return on investment.”

It’s unclear how all this revamping will affect Virginia’s businesses. With nearly $5 million less to spend, however, it seems likely that CIT will jettison some sponsored programs. Some fear programs that help smaller companies, especially in Virginia’s hard-hit manufacturing sectors, could suffer the most.

Virginia’s Manufacturing Innovation Center (VMIC) is one example. CIT established the center, on the campus of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, to help small companies learn how to use advanced manufacturing technologies. Funding for VMIC expires after this year, though. “We’re not anticipating a major problem, since we only get about 25 percent of our funding from CIT,” says Mohamed “Mo” Zarrugh, VMIC’s executive director. Still, Zarrugh acknowledges that losing CIT support could limit VMIC’s ability to expand programs, especially to “smaller companies that don’t have the level of money to risk on R&D” that larger manufacturers do.

One Virginia manufacturer, Bristol-based Strongwell Corp., realized profits sooner as a result of an affiliation with CIT, says company executive Glenn Barefoot. In the late 1990s, CIT provided Strongwell with grants of $100,000 for testing and engineering of fiberglass-based bridge components. Without that money, the company would have had to absorb the cost itself. Says Barefoot: “It allowed us to get the testing done sooner, which helped us get products to market sooner and earn revenues sooner.” In an appearance before Virginia lawmakers, Newstrom also cited Strongwell as an example to show CIT’s impact.

To look at CIT’s future, it may be instructive to look at its past. Rick Claus has one of the longest institutional memories of CIT, having been among a group of business and education leaders that lobbied for its creation. Claus, an engineering professor at Virginia Tech University for 25 years, also heads one of the earliest and most successful CIT-spawned research centers: the Fiber and Electro Optic Research Center. Based at Virginia Tech, FEORC, as it is known, is credited with helping launch 20 start-ups in Blacksburg and surrounding areas, resulting in nearly 200 full-time technology jobs. That’s an average of one new company every year. One of those companies, Nanosonic Inc., was founded by Claus four years ago and has grown to 27 employees.

Despite those impressive stats, CIT halted funding to FEORC in 1995 — a move that puzzles Claus. Under the Newstrom plan, it is possible CIT may revisit ventures like FEORC that have produced results. At any rate, Claus sees the turnover as a needed tonic. “CIT has inertia,” says Claus, sounding like a true engineer, “and like any body that has inertia, it can have difficulty creating momentum.”
Then there is the perennial debate about what to do with CIT’s slanted black building, a local landmark that sits on 29 prime acres. Lawmakers are studying a report from Newstrom’s office that assesses the value of the land and the building, presumably to decide whether they’re worth keeping.

Newstrom doesn’t sound like a man who wants to abolish CIT. He refers to the center as the “umbilical cord” that connects Virginia to other high-tech areas in the country. The agency, he says, is a key driver for tech-based economic growth. Perhaps as the economy improves, both nationally and in Virginia, Newstrom, Jobse & Co. will let up on the accelerator. For now, the mission for CIT is crystalline: get moving, or get lost.

Return to Virginia Business - December 2002



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