|
CONTACT: Jason Foster, foster@mail.sdsu.edu
SDSU Marketing & Communications
(619) 594-2585, pager (619) 620-1184
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SDSU BUSINESS SCHOOL TEAMS
WITH BIOTECHNOLOGY POWERHOUSES TO LAUNCH COMBINED LIFE SCIENCE
PH.D. AND MBA PROGRAM
Curriculum Will Prepare Life Scientists
for Careers in Swiftly Advancing Biotechnology Industry
SAN DIEGO, Tuesday, February 3, 2004 Citing
the increasing need for highly skilled business professionals
to lead the next wave of the rapidly expanding biotechnology industry,
San Diego State University (SDSU) has teamed with Invitrogen Corporation
(Nasdaq:IVGN) and several other biotechnology industry giants
to establish the first joint Ph.D.-MBA program in the nation that
focuses both degrees in the life sciences and features direct
involvement with biotech companies. The university started a pilot
phase in September 2003 that currently has two students, and SDSU
plans to expand the program in the next year.
“With a large number of major breakthroughs
on the horizon for the biotechnology, life science research and
pharmaceutical industries, we need leaders who can not only manage
the discovery cycle through new research, but also demonstrate
the business acumen required to create successful companies around
these ideas,” said Gail K. Naughton, Ph.D., dean of SDSU’s
College of Business and a founder of a public biotech company
as well. “This will help the great ideas that fuel life
science become the actual therapies of the future.”
Naughton said San Diego is the perfect environment
to host such a Ph.D.-MBA program because it’s home to the
third-largest concentration of biotech companies in the nation,
with more than 400 such businesses and several prominent life
science research institutions in the region.
Global biotechnology leaders such as Invitrogen
say the value of this innovative Ph.D.-MBA educational model is
that it’s primed to produce “home-grown” leaders
for its industry who have specialized training in meeting the
distinct research, development, marketing, financing and other
challenges found in drug discovery, biodevice development, and
other life science-related fields.
“One of the biggest challenges in our
industry is attracting candidates who have the skill to envision
functional applications for cutting edge research,” said
Gregory T. Lucier, President and CEO of Invitrogen. “The
types of candidates that companies such as ours seek out are those
who will make a tangible impact on improving the human condition.
This new program is a positive step in training skilled scientists
to become the business leaders of tomorrow.”
Invitrogen, Pfizer and CardioDynamics, Inc.
are sponsoring the start-up phase of the Ph.D.-MBA program. In
addition to sponsorship, Invitrogen is heavily involved in the
program through executive lectures, case studies, internship opportunities
and other application-based initiatives.
“Having executives and scientists from
Invitrogen directly interact with our students will ensure that
our program goes beyond teaching theory to address real-life,
real-time industry needs and concerns, and so students can adapt
as the biotech industry changes,” Naughton said.
By combining what would typically be two extensive
courses of study—a biotechnology-focused MBA and a Ph.D.
in molecular and cell biology (a joint program SDSU offers in
conjunction with the University of California, San Diego)—there
is also an opportunity to complete the program in less time and
move forward into business pursuits more quickly. These attributes
make the program attractive to entrepreneurial-focused students
like Matthew Giacalone.
Giacalone received a bachelor’s degree
in biology from SDSU and went from the master’s program
to join the joint Ph.D.-MBA program in September 2003. He also
has worked for MPEX, an incubator biotechnology company spun off
from SDSU research. His responsibility there was to lead the research
and development effort in creating new types of vaccines. His
dissertation and business plan for the joint Ph.D.-MBA is centered
on the development of a vaccine for viral encephalitis.
“I knew I wanted to pursue a Ph.D. with
an entrepreneurial emphasis,” said Giacalone. “I want
to get ahead in this field, become a manager. I love learning,
and the atmosphere at San Diego State is wonderful. This just
seemed like a perfect fit for me to achieve the type of goals
I have set out for myself.”
Currently, the university is working to secure
additional funding to guarantee the program’s continuation
and growth. Naughton says she hopes that the success and growth
of its joint Ph.D.-MBA degree at her institution will prompt universities
and businesses in other biotechnology hubs to look for similar
ways to advance the profession and the industry.
For more information on the life science Ph.D./MBA
program, please visit www.sdsu.edu/business and www.bio.sdsu.edu/cmb/JointDoc.html.
About Invitrogen
Invitrogen Corporation (Nasdaq: IVGN) provides
products and services that support academic and government research
institutions and pharmaceutical and biotech companies worldwide
in their efforts to improve the human condition. The company provides
essential life science technologies for disease research, drug
discovery, and commercial bio-production. Invitrogen's own research
and development efforts are focused on breakthrough innovation
in all major areas of biological discovery including functional
genomics, proteomics, bio-informatics and cell biology -- placing
Invitrogen's products in nearly every major laboratory in the
world. Founded in 1987, Invitrogen is headquartered in Carlsbad,
California and conducts business in more than 70 countries around
the world. The company globally employs approximately 3,000 scientists
and other professionals. For more information about Invitrogen
visit the company's web site at www.invitrogen.com.
About SDSU
The SDSU College of Business is one of the largest
business schools in the U.S., with over 6,000 students. Its programs
in undergraduate international business and graduate entrepreneurship
are ranked among the top programs in the country by U.S. News
& World Report. In SDSU’s Biology Department, faculty
participating in the PhD-MBA program secure more than $6 million
in annual research funds from the National Institutes of Health,
the National Science Foundation and other agencies. These funds
enable the department to make advances in fighting problems such
as heart disease and infectious diseases and support the students’
mentored dissertation research. SDSU is the oldest and largest
institution of higher education in the San Diego region.
Founded in 1897, SDSU offers bachelor's degrees
in 79 areas, master's degrees in 67 and doctorates in 14. SDSU's
nearly 34,000 students participate in academic curricula distinguished
by direct contact with faculty and an increasing international
emphasis that prepares them for a global future. For more information
log on to www.sdsu.edu.
###
|