From Lab to Launch: The Grueling Journey of Turning Scientific Breakthroughs Into Thriving Startups
By [Your Name], International Business Correspondent
Silicon Valley, California – In the high-stakes world of deep tech startups, a groundbreaking laboratory discovery is merely the opening act. The real challenge lies in transforming that “eureka” moment into a scalable, commercially viable enterprise—a journey fraught with legal hurdles, academic negotiations, and entrepreneurial growing pains. Few understand this better than Dr. Capella Kerst, the Stanford-trained scientist who turned her PhD research on gecko-inspired adhesives into a cutting-edge materials company now making waves from factory floors to outer space.
The Accidental Founder: A Scientist’s Leap Into Entrepreneurship
Five years ago, Kerst was immersed in her doctoral work at Stanford University, studying bio-inspired adhesives modeled after the microscopic hairs that allow geckos to defy gravity. Her focus was purely academic—until a serendipitous breakthrough enabled her to synthesize the material faster and more reliably than ever before. “I wasn’t looking to start a company,” Kerst admits in an exclusive interview with Build Mode, TechCrunch’s podcast on startup foundations. “But when the science clicked, I realized this wasn’t just a thesis—it was a product.”
That realization thrust her into the unfamiliar role of founder, launching a multi-year odyssey to spin her innovation out of academia and into the marketplace. Her company, geCKo Materials, now supplies its revolutionary adhesives to industries ranging from robotics to aerospace, with its technology even aboard the International Space Station. Yet Kerst’s path to success was anything but straightforward, offering a masterclass in the often-overlooked grind of commercializing deep tech.
The Hidden Roadblocks: Why Lab-to-Market Is a Marathon
While Silicon Valley glorifies the “lightbulb moment,” Kerst’s experience underscores a harder truth: scientific innovation is only 10% of the battle. The remaining 90% involves navigating intellectual property laws, university licensing agreements, and the delicate art of transitioning from researcher to CEO.
1. The Pre-Launch Checklist: Crediting Contributors and Securing Rights
Before filing patents or hiring lawyers, Kerst faced an ethical and logistical imperative: acknowledging the researchers whose work paved the way for her discovery. “I reached out to everyone involved—lab mates, collaborators—and gave them options: join the company, advise, or receive compensation,” she explains. This step, often overlooked by first-time founders, is critical to avoiding future disputes and maintaining academic goodwill.
Next came Stanford’s Office of Technology Licensing (OTL), where Kerst learned that spinning out her technology required her to complete her PhD—a bureaucratic hurdle that delayed her launch but ensured she retained credibility in both scientific and business circles. “Start those conversations early,” she advises. “Universities move slowly, and you need time to understand their requirements.”
2. The Legal Gauntlet: Negotiating With Institutional Giants
Unlike consumer tech startups, deep tech ventures often grapple with university-held patents, forcing founders into complex licensing agreements. Stanford provided Kerst with a pre-approved list of attorneys, but she didn’t settle for the first name on the list. “I interviewed lawyers relentlessly, studying past deals to learn what terms were negotiable,” she recalls. Her diligence paid off: she secured favorable equity terms while ensuring the university retained a stake—a win-win that aligned incentives for long-term growth.
3. The Identity Shift: From PhD Candidate to CEO
Perhaps the most profound challenge was psychological. “One day, you’re writing lab reports; the next, you’re pitching investors and managing supply chains,” Kerst reflects. For many academics, this transition is jarring. To bridge the gap, Kerst immersed herself in startup accelerators and sought mentors who’d navigated similar paths. “You have to unlearn the perfectionism of academia,” she notes. “In business, ‘good enough now’ often beats ‘perfect later.’”
From Niche to Mainstream: geCKo’s Expanding Horizons
Today, geCKo Materials exemplifies the potential of bio-inspired design. Its adhesives—reusable, residue-free, and capable of bonding in extreme environments—are replacing traditional fasteners like Velcro and suction cups in industries where precision is paramount.
- Space: NASA has tested geCKo’s adhesives aboard the ISS for securing tools in microgravity.
- Automotive: Manufacturers use them to assemble delicate electronics without damaging components.
- Robotics: Startups integrate the material into grippers for fragile-object handling.
Kerst’s long-term vision? “We want these adhesives to become as ubiquitous as screws or tape,” she says. With $28 million in Series B funding secured last year, that ambition seems increasingly plausible.
Lessons for Aspiring Deep Tech Founders
Kerst’s journey offers a blueprint for researchers eyeing commercialization:
- Build bridges, not silos. Engage collaborators early to avoid IP conflicts.
- Master the bureaucracy. University tech-transfer offices hold the keys—patience and preparation are non-negotiable.
- Embrace the dual identity. Deep tech CEOs must speak the languages of both the lab and the boardroom.
As startups like geCKo prove, the future of innovation lies at the intersection of science and entrepreneurship. Yet for every success story, countless breakthroughs languish in labs, victims of red tape or founder paralysis. Kerst’s message to hesitant academics? “If you believe in your technology, fight for it—but know the fight doesn’t end at the lab door.”
For more on scaling deep tech ventures, tune into TechCrunch’s Build Mode podcast. TechCrunch Disrupt 2026, featuring the Startup Battlefield competition, runs October 13–15 in San Francisco.
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Reporting contributed by [Your Name]. Follow updates on deep tech commercialization at [Your Publication’s Handle].
