healthcarereimagined

Envisioning healthcare for the 21st century

  • About
  • Economics

Defense Innovation Inflection Point? – Forbes

Posted by timmreardon on 05/28/2024
Posted in: Uncategorized.

Mike BrownContributor

Michael Brown is a partner at the VC firm Shield Capital.

Almost a decade ago, Secretary of Defense Ash Carter came to Stanford University in 2015 to announce a bridge between Silicon Valley and the Pentagon, a new organization he termed the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental or DIUx. Secretary Carter realized earlier than many of the technologies the military needed would come from commercial companies at the forefront of AI, autonomy, cyber and commercial space—not from government labs or defense primes.

Why? The Defense Department provides a much smaller proportion of global R&D than in the past (as other countries invested) and commercial businesses now invest more R&D dollars than the government. Sixty years ago, the Defense Department represented 36% of global R&D vs. 3% today. The five largest tech companies spend more than 10x on R&D in comparison to what the five largest defense primes spend.

Inauspicious Beginnings

Changing how the Department views and incorporates commercial technology has not been easy. DIU was initially conceived as a defense embassy to Silicon Valley. What became apparent was that Silicon Valley was not interested in an embassy but instead wanted opportunities to compete for defense contracts. In the fail-fast mode of Silicon Valley, Secretary Carter restarted the operation with a Silicon Valley entrepreneur and F-16 pilot, Raj Shah. Raj had the insight that DIU should be a front door to Pentagon projects which offered revenue contracts for companies that could solve military problems. His team pioneered the use of a fast-track acquisition authority and a competitive process that mirrored how most companies do sourcing.

However, there was a struggle getting Congress to approve and sustain a budget for this startup organization of about $30 million in 2017, and another hiccup when DIU’s reporting relationship changed from the Secretary to an Undersecretary whose primary focus was defense-developed technology—not commercial technology. I succeeded Raj as DIU director in 2018. Despite inconsistent support from defense leadership for budget and manpower, DIU gained approval for its own contracting capability and subsequently scaled to add 100 new vendors who, in turn, attracted 10-20x in venture capital for every $1 awarded in a DIU prototype contract. DIU also increased its transition rate for production contracts to 50% of every prototype effort begun, which in turn attracted 43 potential suppliers for every prototyping effort. Some of the companies now most associated with defense tech like Anduril, C3.ai, Rhombus Power, Shield AI and Vannevar Labs all got a start with DIU prototype contracts but have gone on to develop much more significant businesses serving the Defense Department.

Commercial Technology In The DoD Today

The Defense Department has again realized that accelerating the incorporation of disruptive technology is most effective when reporting to the Secretary of Defense. The Department is now applying commercial technology to its most important problems, specifically, what the military commands of the Indo-Pacific and Europe face in deterring China and Russia. Now with nearly $1 billion from Congress, DIU can field new capabilities in one to two years to support those military commands without waiting for multi-year budget alignment or traditional acquisition processes which on average field new capabilities in 17 years.

In addition, venture capital has begun to support defense tech in an unprecedented way. New firms like ours, Shield Capital, have formed to support national security applications while more established venture firms like Andreesen Horowitz, Lightspeed, and Bessemer Ventures have developed practices focused on defense within their firms. In aggregate, investment in defense tech is up 5x in the past six years and now represents $40 billion annually. With a larger amount of DoD’s budget focused on commercial tech, this is a win-win for the nation—new paths for businesses to ramp revenues faster while modernizing capabilities for the warfighter.

A New Age Bridge From The Pentagon To Silicon Valley

The early days of DIU began to attract the best and brightest of the Valley through contracts, but now with increased resources, there can be a much stronger flywheel effect when more companies receive larger production contracts and, in turn, the companies invest more in their defense product lines and production capacity. Expanding the defense industrial base is critical to any future war effort since the base has consolidated to such a degree that it would be severely constrained in wartime as production constraints in supplying Ukraine have highlighted. As more dollars flow to commercial companies, investors will back more entrepreneurs creating solutions for warfighters. A virtuous circle forms when the defense industrial base grows, is more competitive, offers more choice for the Department in terms of cost/performance and warfighters gain access to leading technology. For too long, our soldiers, sailors and airmen have had access to more modern technology in their civilian consumer lives than while in uniform.

Change is hard and it has taken dedicated civilians, investors, men and women in uniform as well as Congressional leaders years to realize the opportunity and momentum in leveraging commercial technology for defense applications. There is an opportunity at this inflection point to provide the nation and our allies a hedge that can complement the exquisite defense platforms today such as the F-35 and Columbia-class subs.

Today, DIU has the reporting relationship and widespread support to provide the best of what Silicon Valley can offer to equip our warfighters. In August 2023, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks announced that DIU would be a focal point of the Replicator initiative with the aim of delivering thousands of autonomous, low-cost drones to the Indo-Pacific Command within 18-24 months. There appears to be progress 8 months in with an announcement this week that “the delivery of Replicator systems to the warfighter began earlier this month.”

Today, DIU has the reporting relationship and widespread support to provide the best of what Silicon Valley can offer to equip our warfighters. In August 2023, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks announced that DIU would be a focal point of the Replicator initiative with the aim of delivering thousands of autonomous, low-cost drones to the Indo-Pacific Command within 18-24 months. There appears to be progress 8 months in with an announcement this week that “the delivery of Replicator systems to the warfighter began earlier this month.”

Article link: https://www.forbes.com/sites/mikebrown/2024/05/25/defense-innovation-inflection-point/?

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
Like Loading...

Related

Posts navigation

← The world needs a global AI observatory —
Army lifts curtains on planned $1B software development contract →
  • Search site

  • Follow healthcarereimagined on WordPress.com
  • Recent Posts

    • Hype Correction – MIT Technology Review 12/15/2025
    • Semantic Collapse – NeurIPS 2025 12/12/2025
    • The arrhythmia of our current age – MIT Technology Review 12/11/2025
    • AI: The Metabolic Mirage 12/09/2025
    • When it all comes crashing down: The aftermath of the AI boom – Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 12/05/2025
    • Why Digital Transformation—And AI—Demands Systems Thinking – Forbes 12/02/2025
    • How artificial intelligence impacts the US labor market – MIT Sloan 12/01/2025
    • Will quantum computing be chemistry’s next AI? 12/01/2025
    • Ontology is having its moment. 11/28/2025
    • Disconnected Systems Lead to Disconnected Care 11/26/2025
  • Categories

    • Accountable Care Organizations
    • ACOs
    • AHRQ
    • American Board of Internal Medicine
    • Big Data
    • Blue Button
    • Board Certification
    • Cancer Treatment
    • Data Science
    • Digital Services Playbook
    • DoD
    • EHR Interoperability
    • EHR Usability
    • Emergency Medicine
    • FDA
    • FDASIA
    • GAO Reports
    • Genetic Data
    • Genetic Research
    • Genomic Data
    • Global Standards
    • Health Care Costs
    • Health Care Economics
    • Health IT adoption
    • Health Outcomes
    • Healthcare Delivery
    • Healthcare Informatics
    • Healthcare Outcomes
    • Healthcare Security
    • Helathcare Delivery
    • HHS
    • HIPAA
    • ICD-10
    • Innovation
    • Integrated Electronic Health Records
    • IT Acquisition
    • JASONS
    • Lab Report Access
    • Military Health System Reform
    • Mobile Health
    • Mobile Healthcare
    • National Health IT System
    • NSF
    • ONC Reports to Congress
    • Oncology
    • Open Data
    • Patient Centered Medical Home
    • Patient Portals
    • PCMH
    • Precision Medicine
    • Primary Care
    • Public Health
    • Quadruple Aim
    • Quality Measures
    • Rehab Medicine
    • TechFAR Handbook
    • Triple Aim
    • U.S. Air Force Medicine
    • U.S. Army
    • U.S. Army Medicine
    • U.S. Navy Medicine
    • U.S. Surgeon General
    • Uncategorized
    • Value-based Care
    • Veterans Affairs
    • Warrior Transistion Units
    • XPRIZE
  • Archives

    • December 2025 (8)
    • November 2025 (9)
    • October 2025 (10)
    • September 2025 (4)
    • August 2025 (7)
    • July 2025 (2)
    • June 2025 (9)
    • May 2025 (4)
    • April 2025 (11)
    • March 2025 (11)
    • February 2025 (10)
    • January 2025 (12)
    • December 2024 (12)
    • November 2024 (7)
    • October 2024 (5)
    • September 2024 (9)
    • August 2024 (10)
    • July 2024 (13)
    • June 2024 (18)
    • May 2024 (10)
    • April 2024 (19)
    • March 2024 (35)
    • February 2024 (23)
    • January 2024 (16)
    • December 2023 (22)
    • November 2023 (38)
    • October 2023 (24)
    • September 2023 (24)
    • August 2023 (34)
    • July 2023 (33)
    • June 2023 (30)
    • May 2023 (35)
    • April 2023 (30)
    • March 2023 (30)
    • February 2023 (15)
    • January 2023 (17)
    • December 2022 (10)
    • November 2022 (7)
    • October 2022 (22)
    • September 2022 (16)
    • August 2022 (33)
    • July 2022 (28)
    • June 2022 (42)
    • May 2022 (53)
    • April 2022 (35)
    • March 2022 (37)
    • February 2022 (21)
    • January 2022 (28)
    • December 2021 (23)
    • November 2021 (12)
    • October 2021 (10)
    • September 2021 (4)
    • August 2021 (4)
    • July 2021 (4)
    • May 2021 (3)
    • April 2021 (1)
    • March 2021 (2)
    • February 2021 (1)
    • January 2021 (4)
    • December 2020 (7)
    • November 2020 (2)
    • October 2020 (4)
    • September 2020 (7)
    • August 2020 (11)
    • July 2020 (3)
    • June 2020 (5)
    • April 2020 (3)
    • March 2020 (1)
    • February 2020 (1)
    • January 2020 (2)
    • December 2019 (2)
    • November 2019 (1)
    • September 2019 (4)
    • August 2019 (3)
    • July 2019 (5)
    • June 2019 (10)
    • May 2019 (8)
    • April 2019 (6)
    • March 2019 (7)
    • February 2019 (17)
    • January 2019 (14)
    • December 2018 (10)
    • November 2018 (20)
    • October 2018 (14)
    • September 2018 (27)
    • August 2018 (19)
    • July 2018 (16)
    • June 2018 (18)
    • May 2018 (28)
    • April 2018 (3)
    • March 2018 (11)
    • February 2018 (5)
    • January 2018 (10)
    • December 2017 (20)
    • November 2017 (30)
    • October 2017 (33)
    • September 2017 (11)
    • August 2017 (13)
    • July 2017 (9)
    • June 2017 (8)
    • May 2017 (9)
    • April 2017 (4)
    • March 2017 (12)
    • December 2016 (3)
    • September 2016 (4)
    • August 2016 (1)
    • July 2016 (7)
    • June 2016 (7)
    • April 2016 (4)
    • March 2016 (7)
    • February 2016 (1)
    • January 2016 (3)
    • November 2015 (3)
    • October 2015 (2)
    • September 2015 (9)
    • August 2015 (6)
    • June 2015 (5)
    • May 2015 (6)
    • April 2015 (3)
    • March 2015 (16)
    • February 2015 (10)
    • January 2015 (16)
    • December 2014 (9)
    • November 2014 (7)
    • October 2014 (21)
    • September 2014 (8)
    • August 2014 (9)
    • July 2014 (7)
    • June 2014 (5)
    • May 2014 (8)
    • April 2014 (19)
    • March 2014 (8)
    • February 2014 (9)
    • January 2014 (31)
    • December 2013 (23)
    • November 2013 (48)
    • October 2013 (25)
  • Tags

    Business Defense Department Department of Veterans Affairs EHealth EHR Electronic health record Food and Drug Administration Health Health informatics Health Information Exchange Health information technology Health system HIE Hospital IBM Mayo Clinic Medicare Medicine Military Health System Patient Patient portal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act United States United States Department of Defense United States Department of Veterans Affairs
  • Upcoming Events

Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Reblog
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • healthcarereimagined
    • Join 154 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • healthcarereimagined
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Copy shortlink
    • Report this content
    • View post in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d