Title 15 › Chapter 14A— AID TO SMALL BUSINESS › § 657e
Recipients of awards or cooperative agreements under section 657d may use a reasonable amount of funds to create Mentoring Networks. Congress says SBIR and STTR programs create jobs, boost innovation, and help U.S. companies compete; more applications from all States would improve competition and project quality; and mentoring, together with the FAST outreach program, helps new companies succeed. Mentoring Networks must give business advice to high‑tech small businesses in their state or region that are identified under section 657d(c)(1)(E)(ii) as potential SBIR or STTR candidates. Networks must recruit volunteer mentors from firms that completed SBIR or STTR awards. Mentors must have SBIR/STTR experience and agree to guide companies through the process, including help with proposal writing, marketing, government accounting and audits, facilities, human resources, finding partners, commercialization, venture capital contacts, and similar topics. Networks must provide mentor information to the national database. The Administrator must include and update Mentoring Network and mentor data in the database required by section 638(k)(1), promote the networks, and may use contracts to do this.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 657e
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60