Tomczyk and 34 other employees left Commodore in 1984, whose R&D had essentially evaporated with every internal project being cancelled. This was six months after Jack Tramiel left the company for Atari. Tomczyk did go to a dinner with Tramiel, but was told Tramiel would run Atari as a family business, and that there "was no role there" for him. In 1995 he joined the Wharton School as Managing Director of the Emerging Technologies Management Research Program at the Wharton School. In 2001, the ET Program was expanded to the Mack Center for Technological Innovation, which in 2013 became the Mack Institute for Innovation Management. Tomczyk left the Mack Institute in October 2013 and retired from the University of Pennsylvania in June 2014. As Managing Director of the Mack Institute, Tomczyk served as a bridge between academia and industry partners. For more than 12 years he hosted an annual event he originated, called the Emerging Technologies Update Day, which showcased radical innovations looming on the near horizon that had the potential to transform industries and markets. In 2000 he helped launch the BioSciences Crossroads Initiative and in 2006 co-authored (with
Paul J. H. Schoemaker) a major research report entitled: "The Future of BioSciences: Four Scenarios for 2020 and Their Implications for Human Healthcare" (May 2006). He has written articles about gene therapy, Internet applications, and many other technologies. Michael edited the Mack Institute's website and an electronic newsletter; taught sessions on radical innovation in the Wharton Executive Education Program and taught classes in Wharton's MBA program and at the UPENN School of Engineering. For almost a decade he served on the Commercialization Core committee developing translational medicine at the
University of Pennsylvania Medical School. While at Wharton, Tomczyk helped launch five technology startups, as an advisor and/or board member. For several years, he served on the advisory group for the Advanced Computing department at
Temple University. In the early 2000s he served on the leadership committee for the
IEEE/IEC initiative which developed standards for Nanotechnology and is a founding strategic advisor of the Nanotechnology Research Foundation. His interest in nanotechnology led him to write a book entitled "NanoInnovation: What Every Manager Needs to Know," published by Wiley in December 2014. As part of his research for the book, he interviewed more than 150 nanotechnology scientists, entrepreneurs and leaders in business and government. In July 2014, Tomczyk was appointed Innovator in Residence at Villanova University's ICE Center (Innovation, Creativity and Entrepreneurship). At Villanova, he hosts innovation events, teaches and advises students, and works with industry partners. In December 2014 he designed and co-hosted the first annual Villanova Innovation Update Day, a showcase for emerging technologies and applications that are changing industries and markets. In June 2015, he was appointed to the 15-member Triennial Review Committee that will review and provide recommendations for the
National Nanotechnology Initiative. In 2020 and 2021 he helped launch 2 Fintech startups (FamaCash and Fintech Ecosystem Development Corp.) Tomczyk is a Senior Advisor and co-founder at SMC Labs, an entrepreneurial venture that developed a patented scalable blockchain platform called "TOI CHAIN." He is a former member of the board of directors of Fintech Ecosystems Development Corporation (NASDAQ:FEXD) (2021-2024). ==Publications==