We can all be Innovators and Entrepreneurs
24 March 2021, 12:00 pm–1:30 pm

Chris Hancock, Royal Academy of Engineering Visiting Professor will provide this talk reflecting on the key ingredients required to turn an idea into a successful business that can change life. | This talk is aimed at undergraduate and taught Master Students, it is part of a series of lectures being presented by Professor Hancock as RAEng visiting professor.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- All | UCL staff | UCL students
Availability
- Yes
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
Robert Thompson – Institute of Communications and Connected Systems
We can all be Innovators and Entrepreneurs
The key ingredients required to turn an idea into a successful business that can change life

This talk will be focussed on a journey that started from an interest in electronics at an early age that led to the development of a company that is focussed on harnessing the latest advances in engineering and creative ideas to change the way patients are being treated all over the world, with a focus on better patient outcomes. The importance of close interaction between a range of stakeholders, including: electronic and mechanical engineering, clinical expertise, quality and regulatory and investors is considered. This talk will also look at the development of intellectual property and the need to balance the importance of protecting new ideas through registering a patent to obtain a priority date on the idea with the need to publish the outcome from associated research in high impact journals and presenting the results at international conferences.


About the Speaker
Professor Chris Hancock
Chief Technology Officer and Founder at Creo Medical Limited

Creo’s advanced therapeutic energy therapeutic system and miniature instruments have been used now for treatment of patients worldwide for a range of cancers and has transformed the lives of many people – the aim of the company has always been to produce better patient outcomes. In 2009, he was appointed to the chair in Medical Microwave Systems at Bangor University and in 2018 he became a Royal Academy of Engineering Visiting professor at UCL. In 2019 he was awarded the Institute of Physics Katherine Burr Blodgett Gold Medal and Prize for work on the development of advanced therapeutic energy delivery systems to perform minimally invasive surgery. Chris is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics, a Chartered Physicist, Fellow of the Institute of Engineering and Technology, a Chartered Engineer and a Senior Member of the IEEE. He is a named inventor and lead author on over 1000 patents/patent applications and scholarly publications.