Introduction to IRAP

IRAP is the Industrial Research Assistance Program. Like SR&ED, which we discussed last month, IRAP is funded by the Industry Canada and managed by the National Research Council of Canada (NRC). It has a budget of $220 million for 2013/2014.
After SR&ED, IRAP is the second largest government source of funding for Small- to Medium-sized Enterprises (SME’s). However, as IRAP delivers funds to businesses under various programs, any discussion of IRAP requires you to learn the federal government’s “alphabet soup” language. Between last month and the above paragraphs, you should already know the acronyms SR&ED, IRAP, NRC, and SME.IRAP
Before I introduce any further acronyms, we need to clarify one other point. The federal government, like your business, has a fiscal year-end. In their case, the year-end is March 31. So, many government programs expire on that date, or, require approval for additional federal funds to continue past that date. Also, like your business, government departments like NRC are given a yearly budget, which can often be depleted early in the fiscal year. Therefore, the first rule of thumb in dealing with any government-funding program is to get your application in for funding early in the fiscal year, before the budget has been allocated elsewhere.
IRAP provides funds to support multiple aspects of business. The one that is probably of most interest to the printing industry is its Financial Assistance Services support. Under this service, IRAP provides funding for:

  • Technology innovation projects
  • Youth Employment Strategy Program
  • And DTAPP (our next acronym)

Let’s look closer at each of these programs to see how you might qualify, beginning with technology innovation projects. Similar to SR&ED, IRAP will provide funds, at its discretion “to assist firms to develop and adapt technologies and incorporate them into competitive products and services to be commercialized in the global marketplace.”
For example, you are approached by a client to deliver a product that will require you to experiment with utilizing your production equipment in a way that you have never attempted to do previously. However, the potential business opportunity reaches far beyond this client, and could provide you with a new and very significant revenue stream. On the down side, the cost of experimentation will be significant either in manpower or time or material consumed – and a successful outcome is not a foregone conclusion. In that case, you can approach IRAP for financial assistance. If approved, your innovation costs will be subsidized, and, your additional innovation costs might still be eligible for SR&ED funding – definitely a win-win situation.
The second program that IRAP supports is the Youth Employment Strategy Program. Under this program, IRAP will provide SME’s with financial assistance to hire “highly skilled post-secondary graduates.” Funding will go towards assisting in salary costs for qualified graduates who are hired for a period of at least six months to work on innovation projects. These projects can include market analysis for a new technology-based product, business development activities, and customer service improvement activities. Again, certain activities may also qualify for SR&ED funding and the costs not covered by IRAP might be covered by SR&ED. Win and win once again!
Lastly, IRAP supports DTAPP, which stands for Digital Technology Adoption Pilot Program. DTAPP’s goal is to assist you in increasing your productivity through the adoption of digital technology. DTAPP provides funding and advisory services for a wide range of projects including digital technology adoption, and improving the understanding of the link between adopting digital technology and productivity.
DTAPP was created by the 2011 federal budget with $80 million in new funding over three years. That funding expires on March 31, 2014. This reporter asked Industry Canada, the funds provider, if DTAPP will be renewed for future years. The response was “a decision will be made public in due course.”
Based on that response, if your firm is planning to implement or upgrade your systems capability, don’t procrastinate initiating the DTAPP application for the analysis project. In our experience, even if DTAPP is not renewed, when a program is completed, there are allocated funds to companies that are not used (not every project goes over budget), and often, these can be made available to new applicants.
When it comes to obtaining government funding, the four D’s of time management – Do, Delay, Discard and Delegate – don’t apply. If you want your project to be financially supported by government funding, the maxim of government funding applications is “the early bird gets the worm.” Better it should be your business rather than your competitors’.

Elliot Schiller
Elliot Schiller is a Director at Toronto’s Teeger Schiller Inc., a firm specializing in government funding and systems selection/implementation. His clients receive over $5 M annually to support ongoing business innovation. E-mail eschiller@teegerschiller.com, visit www.FundingHelp.ca or phone 1-888-816-0222 Ext. 102

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