Innovation has long been propelled by collaboration, from the pioneering flights of the Wright brothers to the rapid global response in developing COVID-19 vaccines. However, when collaboration occurs between competitors who each bring unique, crucial elements to the table, the dynamics become far more complex. Recent research from the McCombs School of Business at The University of Texas at Austin delves into the delicate equilibrium companies must maintain when working simultaneously as partners and rivals.
This intricate balance arises especially in strategic alliances where a focal company collaborates with multiple other firms that also compete among themselves. While such alliances hold the promise of combining diverse knowledge bases to accelerate innovation, they also trigger fears of proprietary information leaking to competitors. To mitigate this risk, companies increasingly erect internal barriers known as firewalls to limit the flow of sensitive insights within their own inventor networks.
Ramkumar Ranganathan, an associate professor of management at UT Austin, emphasizes that the long-held assumption companies operate freely to recombine knowledge from their various rival alliance partners internally requires re-examination. His recent study scrutinizes the impacts of these informational firewalls, uncovering their unintended consequences on innovation within firms engaged in competitive collaborations.
Ranganathan, together with colleagues Navid Asgari from Fordham University, Deepak Nayak from Ohio State University, and Vivek Tandon from Temple University, focused their empirical investigation within the pharmaceutical sector—a domain renowned for intense R&D activity and collaborative alliances. They mined patent data spanning over a decade from 1996 to 2007, assembling quantitative measures that could illuminate the nuanced interplay of rivalry and cooperation.
Key indicators examined included the quality of inventions, assessed by their frequency of citation in external patents which serves as a proxy for influence; the generation of subsequent innovations as evidenced by citations within the company’s own subsequent patents; the degree of competition among alliance partners, inferred by overlaps in technological domains; and the connectedness of inventors inside the focal company, represented by the recurrence of individual inventors contributing to multiple patents.
A striking case involved Sangamo BioSciences whose 2003 patent portfolio showed a highly interconnected inventor network of 18 individuals. One year later, this interconnectedness fractured, splitting inventors into isolated groups—signifying the construction of internal firewalls designed to prevent knowledge leakage between competing partners under the same corporate umbrella.
The data analysis revealed a tangible cost to innovation linked to the presence of firewalls. Specifically, for every incremental increase in rivalry intensity among partner firms, there was a discernible decrease in inventor collaboration within the focal company. This decline in connectedness directly correlated with drops in both the immediate quality of inventions and their ability to spur future innovations.
Quantitatively, a modest 1% escalation in competitive intensity among alliance partners led to a 0.16% reduction in inventor connectedness. This seemingly small change precipitated a 1.33% decrease in invention quality and a 1.53% fall in the firm’s capacity to build upon those inventions moving forward. These numbers underscore the subtle yet profound impact rivalry-induced firewalls can have on a company’s innovative trajectory.
However, the research did not paint a completely bleak picture for firms navigating the collaboration-competition interface. The study highlighted the pivotal role of bargaining power in shaping internal firewalls and innovation outcomes. Firms possessing coveted knowledge relative to their alliance partners enjoy greater leverage to negotiate how information flows, often reducing the need for strict internal barriers.
Stronger bargaining positions corresponded with higher inventor connectedness within focal companies, suggesting that these firms could enforce alliance rules minimizing competitive frictions and thus support freer recombination of existing knowledge. This, in turn, fostered an environment conducive to higher quality and more generative innovation.
Ranganathan advises companies not to eschew partnerships outright, as innovation alliances remain essential in today’s complex technological landscape. Instead, he urges firms to carefully calibrate how they set up such collaborations, emphasizing early-stage alliance structuring that accounts for competitive overlap and strategically leverages bargaining power to reduce harmful firewalls.
“This is about envisioning beyond short-term financial benefits and transactional exchanges,” Ranganathan reflects. “Allowing internal silos to persist might seem trivial when weighed against immediate gains, yet these barriers accumulate costs that dampen long-term innovation momentum.”
The research illuminates a critical tension in contemporary collaborative innovation: safeguarding proprietary knowledge while enabling the free flow of ideas crucial for breakthrough advances. Effectively managing that tension requires nuanced governance mechanisms, trust-building among partners, and firm-specific considerations of power dynamics.
Ultimately, these findings challenge the simplistic narrative of open collaboration as an unequivocal driver of innovation. They suggest instead that rivalries within alliance networks shape internal organizational behavior and profoundly influence a firm’s inventive potential. Understanding and managing these complex relationships stands as a frontier for both scholars and practitioners seeking to harness the power of cooperation amidst competition.
Further insights from the study may influence how industries characterized by overlapping alliances, such as pharmaceuticals, technology, and energy, design knowledge-sharing protocols. The balancing act between protecting intellectual property and fostering internal knowledge recombination emerges as a defining challenge of innovation management in a globally interconnected yet fiercely competitive economy.
This work published in Organization Science contributes an empirical foundation for deeper exploration into the underpinnings of collaborative innovation strategies, urging firms to critically evaluate their internal structures when engaging with rival partners.
Subject of Research:
Strategic alliances and innovation dynamics within firms collaborating with rival partners.
Article Title:
Knowledge Behind Firewalls: How Rivalry Among Partners Constrains Innovation Inside Firms
Web References:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2022.17230
Keywords:
innovation, collaboration, strategic alliances, competition, firewalls, pharmaceutical industry, knowledge sharing, bargaining power, patent analysis, organizational behavior, R&D management, intellectual property
