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Startup unifies lab management to pave the way for Big Data analytics
Technology Category
- Analytics & Modeling - Big Data Analytics
- Application Infrastructure & Middleware - Data Exchange & Integration
Applicable Industries
- Life Sciences
- Healthcare & Hospitals
Applicable Functions
- Product Research & Development
- Quality Assurance
Use Cases
- Predictive Maintenance
- Inventory Management
Services
- Data Science Services
- System Integration
The Challenge
Spotlight Therapeutics faced several challenges in their lab management. Their inventory management system was prone to human error and created bottlenecks as it was managed by a single person using spreadsheets. This was inefficient and led to errors. Additionally, they lacked a data infrastructure that would allow them to run big data analysis, which was crucial for their discovery platform. Their data lacked the structure and standardization necessary for big data analytics. Furthermore, their unconnected note-taking, lab management, and data interpretation systems encouraged siloed work rather than collaborative work.
About The Customer
Spotlight Therapeutics is a pioneering company in the field of cell-targeted in vivo CRISPR gene editing. They are creating a new class of programmable ribonucleoproteins called Targeted Active Gene Editors (TAGE). These modular biologic constructs are engineered to overcome the current limitations of viral and nanoparticle delivery. The company is an early adopter of Benchling, initially using just Benchling Notebook to record experiments. As they’ve grown and matured their technology, they’ve expanded their Benchling usage to eliminate manual inventory management, enable big data queries, and increase the speed of collaboration. The company is based in Hayward, CA and has between 11 to 50 employees.
The Solution
Spotlight Therapeutics implemented Benchling Registry and Inventory to automate their manual inventory management process. This empowered the team to track usage and availability of common reagents, reducing administrative time and freeing up time for scientific progress. They also unified naming conventions and established standard fields for data capture. With uniform data fields, the team could quickly query across all affinity experiments to find patterns and trends. This set up a clear structure for their data, opening up a world of interesting questions that Spotlight could now explore. The standardized data also had benefits beyond data analysis. It provided a reliable framework to store and share data, which was key to tracking continuous scientific progress, crucial for attracting future investors. Standardized data capture, coupled with custom tools built on Benchling’s APIs, also saved scientists time both for uploading new data and gathering insights.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
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