Intellectual
Property Strategy in the Context of Inter-organizational Relations: the Case of
International Agricultural Research
In
recent decades, intellectual property (IP) strategy has become a more prominent
part of the management of many organizations. This chapter demonstrates the
complexity of IP strategy. Using a taxonomy of inter-organizational relations,
we discuss the IP strategies of the Consultative Group on International
Agricultural Research (CGIAR, or CG for short). However, the core content of
this chapter is methodological and has much wider applicability. Our ideas
apply to non-profit and for-profit organizations as well as to other aspects of
strategic management, such as funding, partnering, and technology positioning.
The
CGIAR, formed in 1971, and its 16 research centres (CG Centres), played a
pivotal role in the Green Revolution, thanks in part to a global network of
transfers of data, genetic resources, and technologies. In the 1990s,
proliferating IP claims caused CG policy makers to become increasingly
concerned about the functioning of this network. The Centres’ freedom to
operate in research and development (R&D) could no longer be taken for
granted. In response, the CG’s Central Advisory Service on Intellectual
Property (CAS-IP) was established in 1999, and several Centres began hiring IP specialists.
Three
underlying themes run through this chapter: partnerships, technology
positioning and segmentation. Partnerships can be defined as medium-term
cooperative interorganizational relations. Examples include repeated transfers
of R&D inputs or outputs, repeated funding and joint R&D projects. Partnerships
tend to reward cooperation and punish non-cooperation.
Technology
positioning is a crucial determinant of each Centre’s inter-organizational relations.
The CG System and its Centres are (or ought to be) constantly reassessing their
role in the global division of labour in agricultural R&D. Technologies may
be either vertically or horizontally related. They are vertically related if
one technology enables another, either physically or conceptually. Horizontal
relations between technologies include the opposites of complementarity –
implying synergistic effects of combining the technologies – and
substitutability – implying that alternative technologies may be used with
similar results. Some types of technology relations appear to have ‘natural’
counterparts in inter-organizational relationship types. For example,
substitutability between two technologies may be associated with competition, although
it may also be associated with collaboration or exchange. Suppose A is an
established technology (say, sexual reproduction of hybrid crop varieties)
while technologyB (say, apomixis as applied to hybrids) is a new and
potentially competing technology. Firms that control A may seek to purchase the
rights to B, or may seek collaboration to secure access to B. This example, taken
from a collaborative agreement of the International Wheat and Maize Improvement
Center (CIMMYT), illustrates the complexity of the link between technology
relations and inter-organizational relations.
Segmentation
of markets and clients is important in partnerships between for-profits and
non-profit organizations. Non-profit organizations want their client groups to
benefit from R&D products on concessional terms, while for-profit
organizations want to minimize those concessional terms with respect to their most
lucrative markets. Various criteria may be used for segmenting markets (CGIAR,
1998; Falcon, 2000; Byerlee and Fischer, 2001; Nottenburg
et
al.
,
2002).