Eureka isn’t a moment. It’s a process. ®
WiSys helps great ideas—born on University of Wisconsin System campuses—reach the wider world by connecting inventors and businesses with the resources they need. We are a non-profit supporting organization of the UW-System, serving as the dedicated technology transfer office for the 11 Comprehensive Campuses. The following grant applications can be submitted via the below links:
Ignite Grant
UW System Administration, in collaboration with WiSys, is pleased to offer the Ignite Grant Program to UW System faculty and academic staff for applied research projects. Ignite funding up to $50,000 is available for applied research, and is offered as a fourteen (14) month program for all disciplines at all institutions.
WiSys Spark Grant Program
The WiSys Spark Grant Program has been designed to help innovators advance their knowledge and technology to commercialization. The grant provides awards of $500 - $10,000/project to faculty or academic staff, towards implementation and completion of short-term projects.
WiSys Launch Grant Program
WiSys Launch Grants are designed to support the further development of technologies that have been accepted into the WiSys Intellectual Property portfolio. The grant timeline is a maximum of 6 months, and the focus of the proposal should be on advancing the technology readiness of the innovation.
WiSys Ambassador Grant Program
The WiSys Ambassador Grant Program has been designed to help students employed as WiSys Ambassadors advance their knowledge and skills as young researchers. The Fund provides awards up $4,500/project to students towards implementation and completion of short- term projects or to advance long-term projects the students have been undertaking with the guidance of a faculty mentor.
For questions regarding WiSys grant programs or application materials, please contact grants@wisys.org.
For technical assistance in creating an account or completing an application, please contact Submittable at support@submittable.com.
I. Background:
Wisconsin Forward Agriculture (Forward Ag) is working to build a regional innovation ecosystem for resilient agriculture. The Request for Proposals (RFP) is responsive to the NSF Engines Program and has funding for Use-Inspired Research & Development (Projects. This funding opportunity is being used to advance collaborative use-inspired R&D on priority topics identified in our region based on the outcomes of the NSF Engines Development Award and input from key industry partners. Any institutions of higher education, non-profits, or small businesses headquartered in Wisconsin are eligible to apply.
Definition and Purpose of Use-Inspired Research & Development
The success of Forward Ag depends on its focus on use-inspired research and development—that is, R&D driven by real-world challenges and opportunities. This includes creating new technologies, solutions, and knowledge that can lead to meaningful economic and societal benefits for Wisconsin.
Projects should be aligned with current market needs and future industry trends. Early-stage R&D efforts (Technology Readiness Levels, TRLs 1–5) are eligible, with the goal of progressing toward commercialization or deployment. The aim of this grant program is to support ideas with potential to bring new products, services, practices or technologies to market.
Teams are encouraged to propose bold, high-impact ideas—regardless of their current maturity—that could transform their field or region within a 10-year horizon.
To ensure long-term success, Forward Ag must build a pipeline of innovative ideas and technologies that can evolve and thrive beyond the initial funding period. Competitive proposals will look ahead to anticipate future regional needs and explore breakthrough technologies.
II. Priority Topic(s):
The Forward Ag initiative aims to create a circular agricultural bioeconomy in Wisconsin. To this end, we are focused on leveraging cross-sector partnerships and novel technologies/practices to convert ag waste and by-products into value-added products/practices that create new revenue streams for farmers and food processors. Specifically within the theme of circular agriculture, we are looking for proposals that address at least one of the following topics:
1. On-site collection and pre-processing: Solutions to facilitate geographically distributed and diverse waste, byproducts, and biomass conversion. These solutions can include, but are not limited to, technologies and practices that support on-site pre-processing or conversion of waste/byproducts that enable diversified income streams from circular systems at the farm or community level; incorporating diverse sources of biomass (e.g. plant and animal waste) in conversion to optimize resource/biomass availability;
2. Waste-to-worth: Proof-of-concept work for creating added value from agricultural or food processing waste with the goal of achieving a circular bioeconomy based on bio-based products like animal/human food supplements, natural dyes, bio-based fuels, bio-plastics, etc. Approaches could include discoveries of novel products; more efficient methodologies for extraction/production of bio-based products; new business and market models for making bio-based products more economically viable, including standards for classifying and assigning value to residues; etc.
3. Optimized supply chain logistics: Innovation in supply chain management at the local, national, or global scale that address Wisconsin's regional opportunities for optimization of agricultural, food, and biomass resources. Projects can focus on solutions that build resilience to fluctuations in weather, costs, or transportation disruptions; data-driven models for optimizing biomass availability and collection across larger regions; analysis of multifaceted data to inform the locations of processing/biomanufacturing plants and other infrastructure needed for a thriving circular bioeconomy; etc.
III. Timeline:
RFP Published: July 14, 2025
Application due date: 5 pm, August 20, 2025
Award Announcement: Early September, 2025
Project start date: October 1, 2025
Project end date: June 30, 2026
Final Report due: August 1, 2026
IV. Budget Guidelines: The total proposal budget should not exceed $80,000 over the nine-month period of performance. Unallowable costs include:
- Indirect costs
- Publication costs
- International travel
V. Proposal Submission:
Forward Ag will only accept full proposals through our online submission portal.
Applicants should not exceed the page or word counts specified for each section. 1-inch page margins, single spacing, font size of 12, and Arial, Aptos or open sans fonts should be used for all sections. Not adhering to these guidelines may result in your proposal not being evaluated. The following sections are required as part of the full proposal submission.
- The project lead (Principal Investigator, PI) and co-leads of the project (Co-PIs)
- Organizational information
- Cover Letter signed by an authorized representative
- Executive Summary (350-word limit)
Provide an abstract that succinctly describes your project in layperson’s terms. How does this project align with use-inspired R&D for creating resilient and circular agricultural systems? The executive summary will need to be entered into a text box on the online submission form.
- Proposal Narrative (5 pages)
The proposal narrative should not exceed 5 pages and utilize the formatting guidelines outlined above. It should contain the following five sub-sections and should be uploaded as a pdf to the submission form. Figures and tables are allowed and should use the same formatting guidelines.
- Project Deliverables (short-term and long-term aims): List technical milestones and extramural deliverables. Include prototype development, key proof of concept tests, anticipated submissions of extramural funding applications, partnerships, and potential intellectual property development.
- Approach/Methods: Provide a short narrative of the proposed work. Clearly state how the approach will enable the project deliverables. Provide analysis of the technical or market feasibility of the proposed work and any steps to mitigate risks.
- Partnerships: Describe how this work involves cross-sector partnerships. Proposals must demonstrate meaningful and significant collaboration between partners from different sectors in the regional ecosystem. Examples include, but are not limited to: Industry or non-profits involved in providing resources through cash, in-kind support, or access to equipment; between-campus collaborations that cross multiple disciplines or areas of expertise; farm businesses or technology startups working with higher education or larger businesses for R&D support.
- Return on Investment: List sources of extramural funding (including agency title/type, total dollar amount, anticipated submission date) that will be enabled by this research. Include any corporate sponsorship. Describe how the project will advance a technology toward commercialization or practice toward implementation– through a key proof of concept, prototype development, or cooperative research effort with a company or other means. Commercialization may be measured by completion of a license agreement, launch of a startup company, ability to secure outside investment, or generate revenue.
- Timeline and Milestones: Include the timeline and key milestones for the project. You may use Gantt charts or similar project mapping tools.
- Budget
The budget should include the following categories and will be filled out in the online application form: Salaries, Fringe, Travel, Equipment, Supplies/Other. The total budget should not exceed $80,000 and should not include any unallowable costs as outlined in the Uniform Guidance for federal grants and the additional unallowable costs listed above in this RFP.
- Budget Justification (2 pages):
The Budget Justification should elaborate on the expected costs for the project for each budget category. Please explain how the funds will be used to meet the milestones and objectives outlined in the Project Narrative.
- Letters of collaboration (maximum of 5):
Letters of 'support' demonstrating an interest in the project with no significant resource or intellectual contribution from the partner will not be considered proof of collaboration. The letters must explicitly state the role that the partner will play in the project and state any in-kind or cash contributions to the project. Proposals without any letters of collaboration will not be accepted.
- Other documents:
References and CVs of key personnel will need to be uploaded as pdfs to the submission form.
VI. Expectations/Requirements for grantees:
- Awarded teams must participate in customer discovery programs facilitated by Forward Ag (examples include facilitated convenings on relevant topics, I-Corp program, WiSys VentureHome’s LaunchPad or Level Up! programs, etc.)
- The project should continue to collect and demonstrate “Use-Inspired” data/feedback.
- The project partners should fulfill the cross-sector collaborations outlined in the proposal and committed in the letters of collaboration.
- The PI will provide a final report at the end of the project, including reporting on the work done by collaborators.
- The team will present at or engage with Forward Ag events to share their work with partners and stakeholders.
- The award spending must comply with federal budget guidelines laid out in the Uniform Guidance (2 CFR Part 200).
- Any substantial changes to the team, budget, or scope of the project should be immediately communicated to Forward Ag by emailing grants@wisys.org.
VII. Review criteria:
- Addresses thematic priorities and requirements
- Demonstration of Use-Inspired/market need
- Evidence of technical feasibility
- Milestones/key objectives
- Novelty and Intellectual Property (IP) potential
- Strength of Cross-sector partnerships
Acknowledgement: Thank you to the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation (WEDC) for funding support for this program through a Key Strategic Partner grant to WiSys.
Contact grants@wisys.org with any questions.
BACKGROUND
WiSys Launch Grants are intended to support the further development of technologies in WiSys' portfolio. Projects requesting support should be focused on advancing the technology readiness of the technology/innovation and should be able to be carried out in under six months.
Prior to submitting a Launch Grant application, applicants are encouraged to first speak with their WiSys Regional Associate to learn more.
Funds can only be used for the IP generating tasks identified in the applicant's proposal and cannot be used for travel, conference or unrelated expenses without prior written approval by WiSys. WiSys will work with the applicant to review the intellectual property (IP) status as additional data is generated for incorporation into existing IP filings and/or new filings as needed. All Project Intellectual Property (Project IP) generated over the course of WiSys Launch Grant funding, shall be disclosed to and assigned to WiSys. “Project Intellectual Property” means all Copyrightable Material, Inventions, trade secrets, data, computer software (including mobile, desktop and online apps), materials, know-how and any other type of intellectual property conceived, reduced to practice, created or made in the performance of the Project. “Copyrightable Material” means any material or other property that is or may be copyrightable or otherwise protectable under Title 17 of the United States Code. “Invention” means any discovery that is or may be patentable or otherwise protectable under Title 35 of the United States Code. Project IP generated shall be disclosed to WiSys under an Invention Disclosure Form.
A final report must be submitted not later than 6 weeks after the completion date of the project. A WiSys team member will be in touch regarding reporting requirements. If a final report is not submitted, this may prevent the applicant’s eligibility for other funding programs offered by WiSys and/or their home campus.
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The following files will need to be downloaded, completed and uploaded to your application form:
1. Cover Page
2. Project Narrative Form
3. Budget Page
For questions, please contact grants@wisys.org.
BACKGROUND
The WiSys Ambassador Program enhances the vital connection between WiSys and the UW regional campus. Engaging excellent students to serve as WiSys Ambassadors brings a new dimension to WiSys' outreach mission and augments WiSys’ visibility and presence among researchers and students on each of the campuses we serve. This in turn builds the culture of research and innovation on campus and provides a vital link to WiSys programs and resources.
The WiSys Ambassador Grant Program (“Ambassador Grant”) aims to connect WiSys with the research community more directly by supporting summer research programs that engage WiSys Ambassadors.
The Ambassador Grant is designed to help WiSys Ambassadors advance their knowledge and skills as young researchers. The Ambassador Grant provides awards up $4,500/project to hire a WiSys Ambassador for a summer research program. Funds awarded may be used for implementation and completion of short- term projects or to advance long-term projects the Ambassador(s) have been undertaking with the guidance of a faculty mentor.
A named award has been developed for the 2020 program, PPG has partnered with WiSys to support one Ambassador working on a project in the field of Chemistry or Materials Science. This student will be recognized as the “PPG WiSys Student Ambassador”. The application process for this award remains the same and the recipient will be selected by WiSys alongside other recipients that are selected for funding within the overall grant program.
General Program Details:
1. Eligible projects will be funded by WiSys up to $4500/project proposal; limit of one award/ambassador/call.
2. Applicants must obtain approval from their faculty mentor to apply to this program.
3. Funds can be used as salary for the WiSys Ambassador researcher and for supplies and expenses; up to $4,000 is allowed for student salary* and up to $500 is allowed for supplies and expenses. Salary for faculty will not be considered in this program. *Fringe Benefits are provided for UW System students listed in the application form. If awarded, Fringe Benefits will be covered by the GPR Fringe Benefit Pool and will be automatically transferred by UW System directly. Therefore, funds for Fringe Benefits should NOT be included in the salary requested nor should they be included within the $4,500 budget.
4. Indirect funds are not allowed in this program. Funds must be used by the end of the 2020 fall semester.
5. Applicants must follow each campus’ internal grant submission and approval process and use the WiSys Ambassador Grant application form provided below for their project proposal. Project Proposals should not exceed 2 pages in length. Applicants should use the Proposal Narrative template provided below.
6. Applicants must have been employed for at least one semester as a WiSys Ambassador and remain in good standing to be eligible for this program.
7. Proposals will be scored based upon clarity of project milestones, development timeline, unmet need/target market, and evidence of project feasibility and/or preliminary data.
A final report must be submitted not later than 6 weeks after the completion date of the project. A WiSys team member will be in touch with successful applicants regarding reporting requirements.
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The following files will need to be downloaded, completed and uploaded to your application form:
1. Project Narrative Form
Contact Tony Hanson at regionalassociate@wisys.org to learn more about this program.