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3042811865
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Strategic Management of Intellectual Property
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spring
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M. Reitzig, "Strategic Management of Intellectual Property," MIT Sloan Management Review 45, no. 3 (spring 2004): 35-40.
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(2004)
MIT Sloan Management Review
, vol.45
, Issue.3
, pp. 35-40
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Reitzig, M.1
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35748974788
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At this time, there is hardly any large-scale, empirical data on the strategic importance of creating, protecting and exploiting IP rights at the business and corporate level. Earlier contributions by W.M. Cohen, R. R. Nelson and J.P. Walsh, Protecting Their Intellectual Assets: Appropriability Conditions and Why U.S. Manufacturing Firms Patent or not, Cambridge, NBER Working Paper 7552, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2000 or
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At this time, there is hardly any large-scale, empirical data on the strategic importance of creating, protecting and exploiting IP rights at the business and corporate level. Earlier contributions by W.M. Cohen, R. R. Nelson and J.P. Walsh, "Protecting Their Intellectual Assets: Appropriability Conditions and Why U.S. Manufacturing Firms Patent (or not)," Cambridge, NBER Working Paper 7552, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2000 or
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0347770741
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Intellectual Property Strategy in
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Japanese and UK Companies: Patent Licensing Decisions and Learning Opportunities, Research Policy 30, no. 3 2001, 425-442, are important; however, they mainly address functional management issues
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R.H. Pitkethly, "Intellectual Property Strategy in Japanese and UK Companies: Patent Licensing Decisions and Learning Opportunities," Research Policy 30, no. 3 (2001): 425-442, are important; however, they mainly address functional management issues.
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Pitkethly, R.H.1
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5
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0022034888
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Product Development Strategy: An Integration of Technology and Marketing
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See, This thought elaborates on Nystrøm's rationale on the interlocking between technology and marketing strategy
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See H. Nystrøm, "Product Development Strategy: An Integration of Technology and Marketing," Journal of Product Innovation Management 2, no. 1 (1985): 25-33. This thought elaborates on Nystrøm's rationale on the interlocking between technology and marketing strategy.
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(1985)
Journal of Product Innovation Management
, vol.2
, Issue.1
, pp. 25-33
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Nystrøm, H.1
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6
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35748984629
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Competitive Advantage (New York: Free Press, 1980) and R. Grant,
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See, Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, for fundamental thoughts on the layered structures of strategies
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See M. Porter, "Competitive Advantage" (New York: Free Press, 1980) and R. Grant, "Contemporary Strategy Analysis" (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 2002) for fundamental thoughts on the layered structures of strategies.
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(2002)
Contemporary Strategy Analysis
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Porter, M.1
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7
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0002523841
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Delineating the Scope of Corporate, Business, and Marketing Strategy
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See, for a detailed discussion about the layered structure of the marketing-related aspects of strategy
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See RR. Varadarajan and T. Clark, "Delineating the Scope of Corporate, Business, and Marketing Strategy," Journal of Business Research 31, no. 2-3 (1994): 93-105, for a detailed discussion about the layered structure of the marketing-related aspects of strategy.
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(1994)
Journal of Business Research
, vol.31
, Issue.2-3
, pp. 93-105
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Varadarajan, R.R.1
Clark, T.2
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8
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35748968154
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A Comprehensive View on Corporations' Intellectual Property: Towards a Specific Strategy-Structure Contingency Framework
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See, paper presented at the, San Juan, Puerto Rico, November 1, for an extension of Varadarajan and Clark's rationale to other areas of intangibles
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See M. Reitzig, "A Comprehensive View on Corporations' Intellectual Property: Towards a Specific Strategy-Structure Contingency Framework" (paper presented at the Strategic Management Society Conference, San Juan, Puerto Rico, November 1, 2004) for an extension of Varadarajan and Clark's rationale to other areas of intangibles.
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(2004)
Strategic Management Society Conference
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Reitzig, M.1
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35748950688
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These questions tried to discriminate between various IP-related strategic scopes reported in the literature: namely, to protect radical inventions from being copied using patents/trademarks/designs; to block entire product spaces by seeking patent and trademark protection for every possible marginal invention; and to generate intellectual property for in-/out- and cross-licensing purposes. For multibusiness corporations, we asked the respondents to focus on their corporation's major business line. Given the relatively small ratio of cases per factor and questionnaire items, we confirmed satisfactory sampling adequacy using Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin's criterion
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These questions tried to discriminate between various IP-related strategic scopes reported in the literature: namely, to protect radical inventions from being copied using patents/trademarks/designs; to block entire product spaces by seeking patent and trademark protection for every possible marginal invention; and to generate intellectual property for in-/out- and cross-licensing purposes. For multibusiness corporations, we asked the respondents to focus on their corporation's major business line. Given the relatively small ratio of cases per factor (and questionnaire items), we confirmed satisfactory sampling adequacy using Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin's criterion.
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35748958045
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Sample biases may arise due to the stratification criteria (company size >250 employees) and the possibly higher willingness of respondents to participate in the survey if intellectual property was already a focus area within their organizations, these effects were not studied in further depth
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Sample biases may arise due to the stratification criteria (company size >250 employees) and the possibly higher willingness of respondents to participate in the survey if intellectual property was already a focus area within their organizations. As this study does not aim at representativeness, however, these effects were not studied in further depth.
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As this study does not aim at representativeness, however
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13
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0002083939
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See, for example, J. Liebeskind, Knowledge, Strategy, and the Theory of the Firm, Strategic Management Journal 17 (winter special issue 1996): 93-107, for a perspective from the mid-1990s.
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See, for example, J. Liebeskind, "Knowledge, Strategy, and the Theory of the Firm," Strategic Management Journal 17 (winter special issue 1996): 93-107, for a perspective from the mid-1990s.
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35748934450
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The senior IP executives were asked to assess their corporations' IP-related performance along five dimensions: their companies' choice of the correct R&D trajectories; the efficacy of their R&D and IP-protection mechanisms; the quality of their existing IP portfolio; the efficacy of their use of their IPRs at the corporate and business-unit level; and the efficacy of their IPR use at the functional level. Their ratings were factorized into a composite IP performance index. Using multivariate regression techniques, the IP performance index was explained through the strategy and organizational variables from the questionnaire. Both factorized items and individual items were tested as regressors. Standard robustness checks were carried out.
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The senior IP executives were asked to assess their corporations' IP-related performance along five dimensions: their companies' choice of the correct R&D trajectories; the efficacy of their R&D and IP-protection mechanisms; the quality of their existing IP portfolio; the efficacy of their use of their IPRs at the corporate and business-unit level; and the efficacy of their IPR use at the functional level. Their ratings were factorized into a composite "IP performance" index. Using multivariate regression techniques, the IP performance index was explained through the strategy and organizational variables from the questionnaire. Both factorized items and individual items were tested as regressors. Standard robustness checks were carried out.
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35748962579
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See, for example, Cohen et al, Protecting Their Intellectual Assets: Appropriability Conditions and Why U.S. Manufacturing Firms Patent or not
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See, for example, Cohen et al., "Protecting Their Intellectual Assets: Appropriability Conditions and Why U.S. Manufacturing Firms Patent (or not)."
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35748932000
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When relating the organizational data to patent-specific performance measures at the project level rather than overall IP performance measures at the firm level, coordination between R&D and IP protection also emerges as an important performance driver. See M. Reitzig and P. Puranam, Value Appropriation as an Organizational Capability, The Case of IP Protection Through Patents, SSRN Working Paper 957335, 2007
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When relating the organizational data to patent-specific performance measures at the project level (rather than overall IP performance measures at the firm level), coordination between R&D and IP protection also emerges as an important performance driver. See M. Reitzig and P. Puranam, "Value Appropriation as an Organizational Capability - The Case of IP Protection Through Patents," SSRN Working Paper 957335, 2007.
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18
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0036871449
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Return on Asset Loss from Situational and Contingency Misfits
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For a description of the extreme misfit test approach, see
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For a description of the "extreme misfit" test approach, see R. Burton, J. Lauridsen and B. Obel, "Return on Asset Loss from Situational and Contingency Misfits," Management Science 48, no. 11 (2002): 1461-1485.
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(2002)
Management Science
, vol.48
, Issue.11
, pp. 1461-1485
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Burton, R.1
Lauridsen, J.2
Obel, B.3
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0003883876
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For a comprehensive description of the contingency theory of organizations, see, London: Sage
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For a comprehensive description of the "contingency theory of organizations," see L. Donaldson, "The Contingency Theory of Organizations" (London: Sage, 2001).
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(2001)
The Contingency Theory of Organizations
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Donaldson, L.1
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35748951868
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The hypotheses that were tested on our survey data were derived from classic organizational design theory-for example, P. Lawrence and J. Lorsch, Organization and Its Environment, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1967
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The hypotheses that were tested on our survey data were derived from classic organizational design theory-for example, P. Lawrence and J. Lorsch, "Organization and Its Environment' (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1967)
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0003682968
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New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovic, and were adjusted to the specific context of this on IP-related activities within the company
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and P. Kandwhalla, 'The Design of Organizations" (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovic, 1977) and were adjusted to the specific context of this on IP-related activities within the company.
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(1977)
The Design of Organizations
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Kandwhalla, P.1
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