Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation

Warf News & Media

The right time to bet on the Wisconsin Idea

A graphic of two jigsaw style puzzle pieces fitting together, each with 3-dimentional cities on top of them, the background is generic graph images

CONTACT:
Jeanan Yasiri Moe, Director of Strategic Communications
[email protected] | 608.960.9892


Commerce presidents say innovation is part of the state’s character in new essay published by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation

MADISON, Wis. – Wisconsin’s urban centers are creating jobs in cutting-edge sectors like advanced manufacturing and health care, but achieving success statewide requires greater collaboration among all regions, urge Zach Brandon and Tim Sheehy.

Brandon leads the Greater Madison Chamber of Commerce and Sheehy is head of the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce.

In a new essay, “Seeking Begins with an Idea,” they draw on the state’s tradition of producing “seekers” – lifelong learners, makers and problem-solvers – and note that UW–Madison ranks 14th in the nation for venture capital-backed entrepreneurs.

Importantly, such talent can be found and fostered within every campus and community in the state.

They write, “Wisconsin used to be described as a place for “boomerangs,” a place where young talent would get an education before making a career elsewhere and then returning years later to start a family. Now Wisconsin is increasingly a place of acorns – a place where young talent takes root – and thanks to our world-class universities, those acorns do not fall far from the tree.”

The new essay is part of a larger online series called “Innovation and the Wisconsin Idea.” In addition to Brandon and Sheehy, contributors include investors, researchers and public officials who share their views on the crucial interdependence between university innovations and the strength of the Wisconsin economy.

Co-authors represent different regions of the state while sharing a common bond through the field they represent, from agriculture and engineering to health care and policymaking.

Contributors to the series include:

  • Erik Iverson, Managing Director, Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation
  • Governor Tommy G. Thompson and Professor Mike Sussman
  • Professor Dan Ludois and Cecil Edirisinghe, CEO of Velicon
  • Chris Salm, CEO of Ab E Discovery, and Dean Kate VandenBosch
  • Dr. Alan Kaplan, CEO of UW Health, and Dr. Susan Turney, CEO of Marshfield Clinic
  • John Neis, Executive Managing Director of Venture Investors, and Cory Nettles, Founder and Managing Director of Generation Growth Capital Inc.
  • Dean Ian Robertson and Greg Piefer, CEO of SHINE Medical Technologies
  • Zach Brandon, President of the Greater Madison Chamber of Commerce, and Tim Sheehy, President of the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce
  • Arjun Sanga, President of WiSys, and Zach Halmstad, Co-Founder of Jamf
  • State Senator Luther Olsen and Dean Robert Golden
  • Chancellor Dean Van Galen and Tom Still, President of the Wisconsin Technology Council
  • State Senator Alberta Darling and Rock Mackie, Professor and Entrepreneur
  • Mike Knetter, President of the University of Wisconsin Foundation

For more information about the series Innovation and the Wisconsin Idea, please visit warf.org/WisconsinInnovates. Comments on the series are welcome at [email protected].

Sign up to be notified when new articles are available.

About WARF
The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) helps steward the cycle of research, discovery, commercialization and investment for the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Founded in 1925 as an independent, nonprofit foundation, WARF manages more than 1,900 patents and an investment portfolio of $2.7 billion as it funds university research, obtains patents for campus discoveries and licenses inventions to industry. For more information, visit WARF.org and view WARF’s Cycle of Innovation.

###

WARF