Barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding: Evidence from a survey of breeding professionals

Using market intelligence to inform breeding investment decisions is critical in matching the supply of genetic innovations with existing demand and prioritizing market segments where there is the greatest potential for delivering impact. This brief draws from a survey of more than 500 breeding prof...

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Autores principales: Rice, Brendan, Kramer, Berber, Trachtman, Carly
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CGIAR 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168799
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author Rice, Brendan
Kramer, Berber
Trachtman, Carly
author_browse Kramer, Berber
Rice, Brendan
Trachtman, Carly
author_facet Rice, Brendan
Kramer, Berber
Trachtman, Carly
author_sort Rice, Brendan
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Using market intelligence to inform breeding investment decisions is critical in matching the supply of genetic innovations with existing demand and prioritizing market segments where there is the greatest potential for delivering impact. This brief draws from a survey of more than 500 breeding professionals to identify characteristics of current market intelligence use in breeding and the barriers to greater use in breeding decisions. We find that while market intelligence appears to have a foothold in breeding teams, the use of market intelligence is still primarily done in an ad hoc manner, and participation of disciplines needed to effectively generate and integrate market intelligence is lacking. Promoting the use of market intelligence in breeding decisions will not only require increasing the availability of quality information but also supporting breeding teams in translating that market intelligence information into varietal advancement and pipeline investment decisions. Moreover, adverse attitudes and misaligned incentives may be inhibiting the use of market intelligence. Specifically, we find that breeding team attitudes on who should be involved in breeding programs may be limiting the move to more transdisciplinary approaches and that current institutional incentive structures may not incentivize the use of market intelligence in breeding decisions. Finally, we discuss ways forward in scaling the more systematic use of market intelligence in breeding decision-making.
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spelling CGSpace1687992025-03-10T15:49:12Z Barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding: Evidence from a survey of breeding professionals Rice, Brendan Kramer, Berber Trachtman, Carly barriers market intelligence plant breeding market segmentation decision making Using market intelligence to inform breeding investment decisions is critical in matching the supply of genetic innovations with existing demand and prioritizing market segments where there is the greatest potential for delivering impact. This brief draws from a survey of more than 500 breeding professionals to identify characteristics of current market intelligence use in breeding and the barriers to greater use in breeding decisions. We find that while market intelligence appears to have a foothold in breeding teams, the use of market intelligence is still primarily done in an ad hoc manner, and participation of disciplines needed to effectively generate and integrate market intelligence is lacking. Promoting the use of market intelligence in breeding decisions will not only require increasing the availability of quality information but also supporting breeding teams in translating that market intelligence information into varietal advancement and pipeline investment decisions. Moreover, adverse attitudes and misaligned incentives may be inhibiting the use of market intelligence. Specifically, we find that breeding team attitudes on who should be involved in breeding programs may be limiting the move to more transdisciplinary approaches and that current institutional incentive structures may not incentivize the use of market intelligence in breeding decisions. Finally, we discuss ways forward in scaling the more systematic use of market intelligence in breeding decision-making. 2024 2025-01-09T22:12:06Z 2025-01-09T22:12:06Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168799 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR Rice, B., Kramer, B., & Trachtman, C. (2024). Barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding: Evidence from a survey of breeding professionals. CGIAR.
spellingShingle barriers
market intelligence
plant breeding
market segmentation
decision making
Rice, Brendan
Kramer, Berber
Trachtman, Carly
Barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding: Evidence from a survey of breeding professionals
title Barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding: Evidence from a survey of breeding professionals
title_full Barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding: Evidence from a survey of breeding professionals
title_fullStr Barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding: Evidence from a survey of breeding professionals
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding: Evidence from a survey of breeding professionals
title_short Barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding: Evidence from a survey of breeding professionals
title_sort barriers to using market intelligence in plant breeding evidence from a survey of breeding professionals
topic barriers
market intelligence
plant breeding
market segmentation
decision making
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168799
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