The decision to collaborate with another entity often represents a pivotal moment for a growing business. Whether you want to scale up your operations, share the burden of financial risk, or combine your technical strengths with a partner, these agreements can open doors that might otherwise stay shut.
However, these partnerships can introduce challenges. Specifically, they bring a layer of complexity that can put your most valuable assets in jeopardy.
At Martensen, we see these arrangements frequently, and we find that they are not always well understood by the parties involved. Properly structuring these collaborations requires you to look at the intersection of your business goals and the legal protections you need.
What Is a Joint Venture?
One of the first things you have to do in any collaboration is define what the relationship actually looks like. It is common for people to use the terms joint venture and joint development as if they mean the same thing, but the legal reality is quite different. A joint venture usually involves creating a completely separate legal entity. In this setup, two or more companies form a third company to handle a specific project or development.
This new entity generally has its own board of directors, its own leadership, and its own intellectual property (IP) portfolio. Because the parent companies hold ownership stakes in the joint venture, their interests are directly tied to how well that new company performs. This is often a structure that investors prefer because it keeps the project contained and provides a very clear framework for how the business is governed.
On the other hand, joint development is typically a contractual arrangement where two parties work together without starting a new corporate entity. In many of these cases, the agreement ends up giving both parties equal rights to any intellectual property that comes out of the collaboration. While that might sound fair on the surface, it often creates a mess where nobody has exclusive control.
Without a single owner, one party might decide to license the technology to a direct competitor or use it in a way that hurts the other party. In our experience, it is usually better for one entity to own the intellectual property while the other party gets a very specific and structured license. This keeps ownership clear and still lets both sides get what they need out of the work.
What Are the Hidden Risks of Shared Intellectual Property?
When you have multiple parties owning a single patent or trademark, the default rules under the law can be very surprising. For example, in patent law, joint owners might be able to use the invention without getting consent from the other owners, and they do not even have to share the profits they make. This lack of exclusivity can destroy the value of the asset, especially if you are trying to get outside investment or looking for someone to acquire your company.
And the problems do not stop there. Enforcement and litigation become much harder. If someone infringes on your rights, a co-owner might be able to block you from taking legal action. In many places, every owner has to join a lawsuit for it to even move forward. If your partner does not want to go to court, perhaps because they have a different relationship with the infringer, you might be stuck with no way to protect yourself.
Different types of intellectual property also have different rules. Copyright disputes often lead to fights over revenue sharing, while joint ownership of a trade secret can lead to that secret being leaked or lost if one person fails to keep it quiet. Trademarks are particularly bad for joint ownership because they are supposed to tell customers that a product comes from a single source.
What Are the Common Pitfalls in Collaborative Agreements?
When companies do not plan for the long haul, we see the same issues pop up repeatedly. These problems usually have more to do with how the partnership was built than with any technical failure. The common challenges in collaborative agreements include:
- Misaligned objectives. Partners might agree on the basic idea but have very different reasons for being there, such as one party wanting quick cash while the other is looking for long-term market growth.
- Weak governance structures. A 50-50 partnership sounds like a good idea until you hit a deadlock, where neither side can make a move without the other saying yes.
- Unclear roles. If you do not explicitly say who is in charge of daily operations, sales, or hiring, you might find that work gets done twice or not at all.
- Cultural clashes. Every organization has its own way of doing things, and different styles of communication or risk tolerance can cause friction.
- Uneven commitment. Priorities change as time goes by, and a partner who was excited on day one might start putting their resources and people into other projects later on.
- Intellectual property disputes. You might run into conflict over who owns new things you build together or whether you can use those things outside of the specific project.
- Financial friction. Disagreements over things like budget overruns and how profits are shared can destroy trust very quickly.
- Compliance exposure. If you are working across borders, one partner might fail to follow local labor laws or regulations, which puts both of you at risk.
- Poor performance management. Without a shared set of metrics to track success, one partner might think things are going well while the other thinks the project is failing.
- Lack of exit strategies. Many businesses act like the partnership will last forever, which makes it very expensive and painful to separate if things do not work out.
Strategic Planning and Due Diligence: Essential in Joint Ventures
If you want to keep risks to a minimum, you have to be proactive. A strong agreement needs to lay out exactly what the collaboration covers, what each side is contributing, and how intellectual property rights will work.
Governance should be designed carefully so that there are clear paths for making decisions and ways to break a tie if you get stuck. It is also vital to figure out how the relationship will end before you even get started. Things like buy-sell clauses and non-compete agreements should be on the table from the beginning, so that you have a clean exit if you need one.
A good IP strategy requires you to think about the entire life of the project. This means doing a thorough IP due diligence review to make sure that whatever everyone is bringing to the table is actually valid and does not infringe on anyone else's rights.
You also need to think about how you will handle enforcement if a competitor tries to steal the work you have done. A well-structured approach to licensing contracts can let everyone share the benefits of a project without dealing with the messy reality of joint ownership.
Whether your project involves patent rights, trade secret protection, or trademark registration, the goal is always to maximize the security and value of what you are building. While this article is about joint ventures and development, you should know these are different from teaming agreements [link when that article is live], which are common in government work and often function more as an “agreement to agree” rather than a solid contract.
How Skilled IP Attorneys Support Your Business Goals
Dealing effectively with the complicated world of joint agreements takes a legal team that sees the bigger picture. At Martensen, our attorneys have decades of experience that covers business, government, technology, and engineering.
We do not just give you technical legal advice in a vacuum. Instead, we ensure our guidance fits into your overall business strategy. Whether you are doing due diligence to stay safe from legal disputes or are looking to manage a whole portfolio of assets, we provide the accurate and current advice you need to stay competitive.
Protecting your innovations is a major part of doing business today, and we are here to help you keep those assets safe as your company grows. If you have questions about joint ventures and intellectual property, contact us. We can talk with you about the challenges you are likely to face but also the opportunities that come from collaboration.
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