Denmark is widely known for its large health care companies, such as Coloplast and GN ReSound, and impressive bridges like the 5-mile-long Öresund Bridge to Sweden.
A new $1.3 million economic-development initiative called MedTech Bridge is trying to capitalize on Denmark's strengths in medical inventions, and bridge-building, by creating international connections to help Danish companies grasp the vast but bewildering U.S. health care market.
A delegation of trade representatives traveled to Minnesota this week to formalize the MedTech Bridge partnership with Minnesota's Medical Alley Association. Activities included tours, a reception, in-person introductions and the formal signing of a partnership agreement at the Medical Alley Association's Golden Valley headquarters.
"In Denmark, we have just started to spread the message," said Lars Henrik Jensen, director of MedTech Bridge. "There are a lot of companies asking, 'Can we join?' … We want to ask them, 'What do you want? Or what do you see as the biggest need for going to the U. S.? What are the hurdles?' And then it will be customer-driven."
Martin Stenfeldt, an advisory board member of MedTech Bridge and CEO of Danish blood-flow imaging firm MedTrace A/S, said the establishment of a long-term point of contact in the U.S. may help companies on both sides of the Atlantic do business.
"It's also about building a community, or a cluster, in Denmark that cultivates the same goal of going to the U.S.," Stenfeldt said. "And then we have the bridge that gives that continuity to strengthen the relationships so that hopefully we also get some U.S. companies, whether that is products or service providers, that see an opportunity in Denmark or in Europe."
MedTech Bridge will have office space in the Finnesse Partners executive search firm in St. Louis Park. MedTech Bridge officials said they chose Minnesota as the home for their collaboration because of the state's concentration of med-tech businesses.
The organization is funded by a three-year philanthropic grant totaling $1.3 million given by the Danish Industry Foundation to the Technical University of Denmark, which is administering the funds for the group. Unlike some trade groups, MedTech Bridge's dedicated funding means it can have a permanent staff of several people.