Yes. Thanks for the question.
That particular program is one where one key element is the people who are the mentors in the program. These are individuals who have generated IP through research and scholarships at the university, and they have undertaken a journey themselves of commercialization or knowledge transfer that has, in some cases, created social enterprises and social innovations, but in other cases technology-based innovations.
Those mentors have one role that relates to simply spotting IP and speaking to colleagues in a generic way that there's a journey that could be taken, a career step they might consider that doesn't necessarily grasp onto a specific innovation or a specific IP element of interest. They are later involved in the actual mentorship of teams that have something they want to bring forward. They do have an intake where they consider the concept that a group has in mind, and if that concept is mature enough, it goes into the academic entrepreneurs in residence program.
If the concept is less mature, they are potentially diverted to our evolve to innovate program, which is a less IP-focused program. It's more about mindset and pathways.