Serial entrepreneur · Professor · Institution builder
“He didn’t just teach founders how to build companies.
He built the entire ecosystem around them.”
Dr. Wayne Brown founded what would become Kinect Capital in 1983 — not as a business, but as a belief: that any founder, regardless of background or connections, deserved access to the knowledge and people that turn ideas into companies. He died unexpectedly in 1988, five years after changing the industry forever. His model still runs today.
Wayne Brown was a University of Utah engineering professor who moonlighted as a serial entrepreneur — and couldn’t separate the two. He founded investor-backed companies while teaching, advised government while running a lab, and saw the gap between great ideas and great companies not as a market opportunity, but as a problem worth solving for its own sake.
He co-architected the U.S. Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program alongside Roland Tibbitts — federal legislation that has since directed billions toward early-stage American innovation. He negotiated directly with the U.S. government to secure military land for what became the University of Utah Research Park. He served as Dean of the College of Engineering. He did all of this before 1988.
THE LEGACY
1983 •
Created the world’s first venture accelerator as an educational non-profit at the University of Utah.
1983-84 •
Worked alongside Roland Tibbitts to create federal legislation funneling innovation funding to small businesses.
1984-88 •
Led the State Science Council, created the Utah Technology Finance Corporation, secured land for the U of U Research Park.
1985 •
Recruited the leader who would steward his vision for the next 34 years.
1988 •
The organization was renamed the Wayne Brown Institute in his honor. His model continued without him — the clearest measure of what he built.
WHAT HE BUILT THAT OUTLASTED HIM
Dr. Brown’s board members didn’t stop when he did. The network he convened went on to create much of Utah’s venture infrastructure.
"The organization Wayne Brown built has outlasted him by 37 years. The founders it serves today had no idea who he was — and that's exactly what he would have wanted."
Kinect Capital continues his work: making great founders out of people who don’t yet know they are one. The mission is intact. The need is urgent. What’s missing right now is the operating support to meet it. If Dr. Brown’s story means something to you — as a mentor, an investor, or someone who believes in what he started — we’d like to talk.
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