The technology may be revolutionary, but the idea was simple and coming up with the name for his company was pretty much a no-brainer, too.
"It had to do with electricity and innovation," said inventor and company Chairman Deepak Divan. "I was shocked when I went on the Internet and found out the name Innovolt wasn't already taken."
|
Divan was talking after a news conference at Georgia Tech on Tuesday, where he and Innovolt Inc. President and CEO Suresh Sharma trumpeted their company as the biggest startup to emerge from the Georgia Tech Advance Technology Development incubator since Scientific Atlanta, which was launched by six Tech professors in 1951.
The Innovolt, three years in development, is revolutionary because it protects electrical equipment not just from lightning but from the routine power surges that flow through the nation's power grid and are "equally as damaging" as lightning, said Sharma.
Georgia Tech contributed about $100,000 in seed capital for the venture, according to Divan.
Individual investors put in another "three or four million," he said.
Innovolt Inc. already is distributing the surge protector on its Web site, www.innovolt.com. The company has a distribution agreement with Better Office Systems and has begun negotiations with Best Buy and Wal-Mart, said Divan.
The Innovolt units are manufactured at a plant in Pune, India. But the company will have a growing presence in Georgia. Divan said for now the company will keep its offices in the Advanced Technology Development Center in Atlanta. It has 10 full-time local employees and 100 employees worldwide.
"Next year at this time we envision having 40 or 50 employees in Atlanta and 300 to 400 worldwide," he said.
Vote for this story!

Here's the place you said is tops to watch the celebration for our country's independence.

You might have caught a glimpse of the star as she filmed "The Blind Side" at the Westminster School.

Like the AJC Peachtree Road Race but not a runner? That's OK. Be a spectator. Here are the best places.

Boredom and lack of money are the mothers of invention when it comes to lawn games such as lawn Scrabble.

Does Sanford Stadium top the list, or do the Bulldogs finish behind the Gators again?

If San Francisco or other places West of the Rockies are in your plans, $100 fares will make you smile.