In Vivo is part of Pharma Intelligence UK Limited

This site is operated by Pharma Intelligence UK Limited, a company registered in England and Wales with company number 13787459 whose registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. The Pharma Intelligence group is owned by Caerus Topco S.à r.l. and all copyright resides with the group.

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use. For high-quality copies or electronic reprints for distribution to colleagues or customers, please call +44 (0) 20 3377 3183

Printed By

UsernamePublicRestriction

Managing Alliances at Lilly

Executive Summary

While alliances look like a relatively quick, cost effective way to keep the pipeline filled with new molecules, available data suggest that over half of all alliances fail to reach their intended outcome, thanks largely to relationship, not technical, failures. Lilly's alliance management program aims to streamline and simplify the alliance management process by systematizing the approach: training managers, creating management structures for all alliances, and regularly assessing each alliance's health along predetermined criteria. Alliance managers, employed by Lilly's Office of Alliance Management, have the responsibility for ensuring that alliance teams use appropriate planning, organization and start-up processes and for fixing alliances when they get into trouble, sometimes by shifting employee responsibilities. These managers can exploit an extensive alliance management tool kit, including a database of all alliances intended to codify what Lilly's learned from each alliance. While ROI on the program is difficult as yet to measure, anecdotally the program is working, having repaired several damaged alliances, and, with luck, helped brand Lilly as a partner of choice in a world when the economics of deals alone don't dramatically differentiate partners.

You may also be interested in...



Big Pharma's Next Challenge: Managing an Increasing Number of Complex Alliances

Speaker after speaker at this year's Pharmaceutical Strategic Alliances (PSA) conference echoed the theme: Big Pharma firms will increasingly rely on in-licensed products resulting from alliances to make up for shortfalls in their own internal R&D efforts.

Big Pharma's Next Challenge: Managing an Increasing Number of Complex Alliances

Speaker after speaker at this year's Pharmaceutical Strategic Alliances (PSA) conference echoed the theme: Big Pharma firms will increasingly rely on in-licensed products resulting from alliances to make up for shortfalls in their own internal R&D efforts.

Lilly & Boehringer: When You Gotta Partner, You Gotta Partner

Lilly's co-promotion with Boehringer Ingelheim of duloxetine is the first time the American company has signed a major marketing deal for one of its own products. The company notes the collaboration is part of its broad commitment to partnering and that the market is intensely competitive. But the choice of duloxetine--the launch of which may be delayed indefinitely because of manufacturing problems--also represents Lilly's lowest-risk option for subsidizing the launches, and maximizing the returns from, potentially eight new products over the next few years.

Topics

Related Companies

Related Deals

Latest Headlines
See All
UsernamePublicRestriction

Register

IV001682

Ask The Analyst

Ask the Analyst is free for subscribers.  Submit your question and one of our analysts will be in touch.

Your question has been successfully sent to the email address below and we will get back as soon as possible. my@email.address.

All fields are required.

Please make sure all fields are completed.

Please make sure you have filled out all fields

Please make sure you have filled out all fields

Please enter a valid e-mail address

Please enter a valid Phone Number

Ask your question to our analysts

Cancel