Ask HN: Has anyone had success with SBIR grants and what is the process like?
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llyfeninja about 3 hours ago 4 comments
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I'm considering applying to a phase I topic that is a pretty good fit for our tech and we should meet all basic requirements (U S. Based, small business, etc.), but I'm unsure if the juice is worth the squeeze.
If anyone has any experience applying and going through the process I'd love to hear about it.
Things I'm curious about... - how competitive is it? - how detailed should proposals be? - am I guaranteed to hear back? - how long after closing is a decision made?
Thanks in advance.

Discussion (4 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
For follow-on work you need to find government customers and project champions. The SBIR program isn’t your customer, it’s funding.
There are a lot of SBIR advisors out there, and some of them are predatory. They’ll promise contacts and contracts but you’ll definitely want to interview previous clients before paying anybody.
Here's my advice:
1) Your proposal needs to be completely solid and well-structured:
- Describe the problem. Put it into a Defense/Intel context. Talk about the needs of the warfighter.
- Do a literature review of the field, and explain what the state-of-the-art looks like today.
- Explain what previous approaches to the problem have been attempted in the past.
- Demonstrate why those approaches are flawed.
- Describe your novel approach.
- Explain why your approach will succeed where others have failed.
- Talk about what you'll deliver in your Phase I deliverable, so that you can demonstrate proof-of-concept.
- Talk about how your eventual Phase II will put your proof-of-concept into a real-world scenario, and offer at least a glimpse of how your Phase III+ will commercialize.
- Talk about your team. Why are you uniquely capable of solving this problem?
- Talk about your budget. How will you spend the money toward satisfaction of the deliverables (salaries, subcontractors, equipment and supplies, etc)
2) As soon as you know you're interested in a topic, send an email to the Principal Investigator, telling them you'd like to meet with them to talk about the topic. Before the phone call, research the PI's history with this topic. Also, lookup the archive of SBIR topics, to see if this person has been a PI on similar topics in the past.
When you meet with them, ask clarifying questions that demonstrate you know the domain. Try to get as much specificity as you can... Ask them what their success criteria look like. See if you can get them excited!
Most importantly, by the time you submit, the PI should already know your name and to expect your submission.
3) If you're not already a recognized expert, with published academic papers on the topic, that's okay! But you'll improve your chances of winning a grant if you hire a known researcher as an advisor. For example, I've hired a Computer Science professor to supervise one of their own grad students, while doing paid work on a SBIR project. So the professor's credentials and the grad student's previous publications also became part of the SBIR proposal.
Anyhow, good luck!
You don't really make money on Phase I projects, but that's how you get the ball rolling on future work, which can be very lucrative.