Title :
Building and sustaining marine technology partnerships
Author_Institution :
Marine Information Resources Corp., Ellicott City, MD, USA
Abstract :
This paper defines a marine technology partnership and presents the fundamental mechanics for sustaining a viable partnership. Partnerships follow a natural life cycle and should be formally structured to share costs and be inclusive, i.e., promoting broad participation. By understanding partnership principles and studying currently operating partnerships, one can become equipped to use a partnership strategy to meet marine technology challenges. Inventive planning and formal accountability provide the key mechanisms for broadening the partnership and adapting it to changing societal needs. Critical steps that sustain a viable partnership include operational principles that extend from initiating a partnership agreement to conducting meaningful evaluation. Marine technology partnerships should enable participants to integrate multidisciplinary resources to support key oceanographic, meteorological, engineering, and marine operations. Several federal initiatives such as the Small Business Technology Transfer program and the National Ocean Partnership Program now exist to facilitate collaborative research. These programs have contributed to the development of productive business-industry-academic partnerships
Keywords :
commerce; marine systems; oceanographic equipment; oceanographic techniques; oceanography; National Ocean Partnership Program; Small Business Technology Transfer program; business-industry-academic partnership; collaborative research; commerce; engineering; equipment; marine system; marine technology; ocean; partnership; private company; Buildings; Cities and towns; Collaborative work; Costs; Educational products; Educational programs; Industrial relations; Information resources; Marine technology; Shipbuilding industry;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2000 MTS/IEEE Conference and Exhibition
Conference_Location :
Providence, RI
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6551-8
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.2000.881333