Founding Teams Don’t Form Themselves
How R&D Venture Studios Orchestrate Entrepreneurial Chemistry
One of the great myths of startup formation—especially in academic and research environments—is that if the technology is strong enough, the right team will naturally come together around it.
In reality, that almost never happens on its own.
Startups are not built by technologies. They’re built by people. And people don’t just appear fully formed around a whiteboard. They need to be found, invited, challenged, inspired—and matched to the right opportunity at the right moment.
That’s why at MIT Proto Ventures, we treat founding team formation as a core function of venture creation, not something that happens afterward.
Why This Matters (Especially in Deep Tech)
In deep tech ventures, team dynamics are especially fragile:
Most researchers aren’t entrepreneurs (and don’t necessarily want to be)
Most technical founders don’t have commercialization experience
Most entrepreneurs don’t have access to lab IP or a way to join pre-incorporation projects
Most institutions don’t have a mechanism to facilitate intentional co-founder matching
The result? Promising startup ideas stall for lack of a team.
This is a crucial challenge; one that innovative programs like The Engine’s Blueprint, Activate, and Breakthrough Energy Fellows are also tackling.
At MIT Proto Ventures, we built a system that deliberately assembles, tests, and supports founding teams—long before a company exists.
One Way That We Do This: The Proto Ventures Fellowship
Each semester, we run a Fellowship Program: a 12-week, part-time opportunity for aspiring founders across MIT to explore venture ideas alongside our Venture Builders.
Our Fellows are:
Postdocs and PhD students in engineering or scientific disciplines
Mid-career MBA students
Bringing something unique to the table: a technology, a market insight, a specific network or expertise area
Strongly motivated to build a startup after leaving MIT
Not really sure what this startup will be (yet).
Not tourists—they’re potential co-founders
They aren’t applying to work on a startup. They’re joining us to help build one from scratch.
What Fellows Actually Do
During the program, Fellows:
Explore venture concepts alongside our team
Conduct customer discovery interviews and market research
Pressure-test ideas and pivot early
Participate in technical de-risking and product ideation
Attend workshops on startup formation, fundraising, and go-to-market
By the end, they’ve contributed meaningfully to one or more venture projects. In many cases, they co-found a startup.
In fact, several of our portfolio ventures — like Vertical Horizons, American Fusion Instruments, and Hyperion Transport Systems — trace their founding teams back to these early collaborations.
More Than Matching—It's Chemistry
We don’t believe in algorithmic co-founder matchmaking.
Instead, we think of this as entrepreneurial chemistry.
The venture studio is the beaker.
We create the conditions, and then observe what reactions emerge.
Sometimes, it’s a technical founder finding a business partner.
Sometimes, it’s a researcher realizing they actually do want to lead a startup.
Sometimes, it’s a talented Fellow bringing a new market idea that reshapes a project’s direction entirely.
Why Studios Are Uniquely Positioned to Do This
Accelerators and entrepreneurship centers focus on teams that already exist.
Most tech transfer offices can’t support team formation.
Most researchers don’t know where to find a business partner—and most MBAs don’t know which lab technologies even exist.
R&D Venture Studios fill that gap.
We operate before incorporation.
We run the early-stage exploration.
We know which ideas are emerging, and we know who might be a fit to help lead them.
So we treat the founding team as part of the design space—not as an afterthought.
📘 Want the full breakdown of how our studio model works?
We’re preparing to launch the first edition of our R&D Venture Studio Playbook—a comprehensive guide to creating high-impact startups from research. Stay tuned in the coming weeks for the release.
Next in our series: “What’s Missing? How Studios Reveal Needs Before the Market Even Knows.”