Noubar Afeyan has dedicated his career to improving the human condition by systematically creating science-based innovations that are the foundations for startup companies. At ĢƵAPP, which he founded in 2000, Afeyan built an enterprise where entrepreneurially minded scientists ask, “What if?” and iterate toward the answer “It turns out …” in order to create first-in-category companies in health and sustainablity. Over two decades, Flagship has fostered the development of more than 100 scientific ventures resulting in $30 billion in aggregate value, thousands of patents and patent applications, and more than 50 drugs in clinical development.
Afeyan spoke to , a professor at Harvard Business School and the author of Creative Construction: The DNA of Sustained Innovation, at Flagship’s offices in December 2019.
Gary Pisano: What was your journey from the time you were young to starting Flagship?
Noubar Afeyan: I was born to an Armenian family living in Beirut, Lebanon, and in 1975 immigrated in a hurry to Canada, which graciously accepted my family as escapees from the civil war, giving us citizenship. I grew up in Canada, went to college there, and ended up coming to Boston to attend MIT. My interests at the time were in engineering, particularly chemical engineering. But the frontier of that field was focusing, for the first time, on biological engineering. So I did my PhD in one of the very first cohorts to be educated in this hybrid way between engineering and science.
In 1987, I ended up taking a big leap of faith and starting a company, which back then was not the traditional path. I grew and ran PerSeptive Biosystems for 10 years, five of them as a public company. It ended up becoming the largest instrumentation company on the protein side of the life sciences. I got involved in a number of other startups along the way in the ’90s. That all led to the formation of Flagship some 20 years ago.
GP: Why Flagship? Why didn’t you just start other companies? Some folks start a company and then they start another, but you took a different route.
NA: PerSeptive Biosystems was an intense 10-year, postgraduate education in everything related to applying science, engineering, innovation, IP, and marketing to business. It was an intense learning process. One of the things I became drawn to was all the ways in which you could create value from breakthroughs. Because I had the good fortune of having a strong team of innovators inside a company of some 880 people, over 200 with advanced degrees, I became interested in doing entrepreneurship in parallel. I was running one company, and I started spinning out other companies and partnering to start new companies. I realized that becoming a co-founder is an interesting concept relative to a solo founder and that you could do more than one thing in parallel. The notion of parallel entrepreneurship made me ask: Can you do more this way than improvisational entrepreneurship? That led to the founding of Flagship.
In 1997, PerSeptive successfully merged with the DNA leader in the instrumentation space [Perkin Elmer/Applera, in a stock swap valued at $360 million]. A number of the other startups I was involved in co-founding had gone public, or had been sold. And on the heels of all that, I developed the basis of the belief that the only way to do this type of activity for a living was not serial entrepreneurship, which is the traditional notion, but a more disciplined professional process. I set out on a journey: Flagship is just the instantiation of figuring out whether, how, how well, with whom, one can do this.
In its initial formative stage, Flagship was called NewCoGen, which stood for “new company generation.” Two years later, people had convinced me that it sounded like a disease of some sort, and I picked a different name. But new-co-gen was what we did. We wanted our products to be other companies, and that journey continues 20 years later with exactly the same notion, although we’re getting a little better at it and have scaled quite a bit.
It’s a completely different way to think about entrepreneurship, because the context within which startups operate historically, at least when I started, celebrated a romantic, chaotic, improvisational kind of culture. They tell majestic birthing stories, where eventually, if the company succeeds, the birthing process gets more and more glamorized. And the reality is it’s messy, unpredictable, fraught with risks and errors. And whether it can only be done that way instead of being a little more thoughtful, a little more planned and disciplined, and a little more consequential, seemed like appropriate questions to ask, especially having received a classical engineering education. It’s been an interesting battle to figure out what can and what cannot be operated in an institutional way when it comes to startups.
GP: What’s different about Flagship from a traditional venture capital firm? You do raise funds. But from what you’re describing, you’re not a venture capital firm at all.
NA: We’re not actually structured as a venture capital firm. Or put it this way: A venture capital firm is just a part of how we’re structured. It’s how we source capital: We raise funds and deploy them to finance our activities over a limited time frame. Instead, we are organized as a company where our deeply experienced leadership team manages all aspects of company creation and development in the same way that another business would manage the process of making medicines, or cars, or what have you.
So we centrally have operations that involve research and development, which we call origination; growth, which is like manufacturing; and finance, IP, legal, etc. But we operate organizationally as a company that happens to avail itself of venture financing. We don’t have a singlular consolidated balance sheet as would a conglomerate. We’re not operating off a permanent base of capital. We’re going through cycles of fundraising with each representing a new beginning. Part of the reason is historical: When we started, the only money available for this kind of portfolio came from the people who invested in other portfolios of companies, who invested in venture capital.
But more specifically, the way we’re different is the following: In traditional venture capital, everything that happens involves science that comes from academia or research institutions, hospitals, etc. If you bring in scientific breakthroughs that have already been made, hire appropriate people, and deploy capital, you can do a startup today in the life sciences. By the way, in each of those categories, there are multiple instances of each. So there are multiple sources of science in typical venture-capital funded startups, multiple people that get brought together, and multiple sources of capital. It’s all syndicated.