Through Luminate NY, Lidrotec was introduced to AIM Photonics. The collaboration is helping Lidrotec to build the infrastructure for developing the next iteration of its technology and to execute on its plans to establish U.S. operations.
“We founded the company in Germany, and operationally we are still there,” Igelmann said. “But we have an American entity now. The U.S. is a huge market for us in the semiconductor industry. If you think of the biggest semiconductor company, you’ll think of a U.S. company. So, it’s clear that we need to target this market.
"Luminate provided us with a new network into the United States, along with contacts to suppliers and clients. These vital connections will help us to meet our development milestones during the next two years, which include market validation for our novel laser technology,” he said.
Luminate finalists compete for a total of $2 million in follow-on funding, which is comprised of the $1 million investment to the winning team and other investments that total an additional $1 million. All winners of the competition will establish operations in the region for at least the next 18 months following the close of the cohort.
Cohort 5 finalists consisted of 10 startups from six countries. Each finalist received an initial investment of $100,000 prior to the up-to-$2 million competition. Accepted startups have access to and benefit from mentorship from industry experts, as well as access to investors, lab facilities, and comprehensive curriculum.
The six-country representation is double the number of countries that participated as finalists in Luminate’s first cohort. Luminate NY managing director Sujatha Ramanujan said the international aspect of Cohort 5 was a distinguisher for the participating companies.
“This year's cohort was very international, and really bonded well," Ramanujan told Photonics Media. Where previous cohorts worked through the program virtually during the COVID-19 pandemic, cohort 5 companies had an added cohesiveness brought about by working together in person.
“This cohort got to really experience New York, which was really important — to come here and spend a significant amount of time with vendors and with the region to understand why a business can develop well here,” she said.
Custom Surgical, the Munich-based developer of the MicroREC optical system that allows opthalmologists to connect any smartphone camera to the optical path of a microscope, secured $510,000 in funding as the cohort’s Outstanding Graduate. The company was also the Audience Choice award winner as voted on by attending audience members. Alertgy earned $250,000 for its noninvasive blood glucose monitoring solution. MeetOptics and Scout each earned $125,000 in follow-on funding. MeetOptics received the funding for its AI-driven platform that enables specialized searches of optics and photonics components for engineers and researchers. Scout engineers vision-based autonomy solutions for Earth and space.
Susan Houde-Walker, director of the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science at the Rochester Institute of Technology and CEO of LMD Power of Light Corp. (formerly LaserMax Inc.), delivered the event keynote. Additional speakers included Optica CEO Liz Rogan; Finger Lakes Regional Director for Empire State Development Vincent Esposito; and Rochester mayor Malik Evans, who officially declared Oct. 19 “Luminate Day” in the city.
A total of 130 applications were received for consideration to participate in the world’s largest accelerator for startups working on emerging solutions that are enabled by optics, photonics, and imaging.
According to Ramanujan, as the accelerator has advanced, so too have the defining characteristics of each cohort and its members, along with the types of technologies and applications the companies are advancing.
“Each cohort has had a different flavor of what they're bringing to the optics community," Ramanujan said. “Early on we had a lot more medical tech, medical device, and pharmaceutical research because that was the trend of what was happening in industry."
She said entrepreneurs participating in this cohort offered solutions addressing the supply chain and the semiconductor industry. “A lot of critical issues in the world right now come out in the innovation that these entrepreneurs bring forward."
Funding for the $25 million Luminate Accelerator program, which was created and run by NextCorps, is provided through the Finger Lakes Forward Upstate Revitalization Initiative.
“In the last five years, Luminate NY has brought 54 of the most promising companies from around the world to New York to connect them with our region’s top universities, talent, and manufacturing facilities to help them solve pressing industry challenges,” said Hope Knight, Empire State Development president and CEO and commissioner, at the opening for Cohort 6 applicants.
Luminate portfolio companies have a collective estimated value of more than $400 million, and have raised an additional $127 million, Ramanujan said. Applications for participants in the cohort opened in September and will remain open into Jan. 2023.