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For a biotech with an established commercial infrastructure, the most efficient growth strategy is to in-license late-stage or already-approved products. This leverages the existing sales force and operational teams to sell new products without adding significant overhead, maximizing operational efficiency and revenue.
The company's long-term plan is to handle drug development through to a successful New Drug Application (NDA) filing, then partner with a larger pharmaceutical company for marketing and sales. By deliberately avoiding the need to build a commercial sales force, they maintain focus on their core competency: drug development and clinical execution.
The old assumption that small biotechs struggle with commercialization ("short the launch") is fading. Acquirers now target companies like Verona and Intracellular that have already built successful sales operations. This de-risks the acquisition by proving the drug's market viability before the deal, signaling a maturation of the biotech sector.
Vivtex funded its growth and reached profitability not through traditional VC rounds, but by securing around 10 early pharma partnerships. This strategy provided significant non-dilutive revenue, reducing their reliance on investors and giving them more control over their trajectory—a powerful alternative to the typical biotech funding model.
Contrary to the focus on large upfront payments, a smarter partnership strategy is to negotiate for a larger share of downstream success through royalties and milestones. This can yield far greater long-term returns if the product succeeds.
Mirum's acquisition strategy targets late-stage assets like berlovitug that can leverage its established global commercial operations. This approach maximizes efficiency, as new products fit into the existing sales structure supporting its current portfolio, especially in the adult hepatology space, making the acquisition highly strategic.
Instead of solely relying on replicating internal R&D success, a proven biotech can create value by acquiring passive assets. This involves buying royalty streams on promising external products, leveraging the company's evaluation and deal-making expertise in a new way.
After proving a new manufacturing platform with one profitable industrial facility, the fastest path to market-wide adoption is licensing the technology to established players. This trades maximum per-unit profit for speed and scale, leveraging partners' existing infrastructure.
BridgeBio aims to become a "next generational" company like Regeneron. They believe the rare combination of two ingredients makes this possible: a successful, launched flagship product generating revenue, and a robust pipeline of multiple Phase 3 programs all set to read out within a year.
Ipsen avoids the high-risk, capital-intensive phase of basic research. Instead, its R&D strategy focuses on licensing promising drug candidates from universities and biotechs. The company then leverages its expertise in later-stage development, including toxicology, manufacturing scale-up (CMC), and clinical trials, to bring these de-risked assets to market.
Lacking internal research capabilities, Mirum's core business model is to in-license or acquire promising assets. This strategy, initiated in 2018 with assets from Shire, relies on their proven operational team to develop and maximize the value of external innovations.