Anti-counterfeit strategy needs interdisciplinary approach

To develop and implement successful anti-counterfeit strategies, you need more than good technology.

Pw 5704 John Spink

You have to educate yourself and connect inside and outside your company. A good strategy needs the kind of interdisciplinary approach that you see in educational programs of IoPP and in our activities at Michigan State University.

A seemingly constant stream of high-profile counterfeiting incidents is raising awareness of consumers, regulators, enforcement agencies, and brand owners. In addition, product counterfeiting is not just limited to luxury goods or lifestyle drugs. Look at the counterfeit additive melamine in both pet food and milk. And remember counterfeit branded toothpaste in dollar stores.

Packaging managers get the task of finding anti-counterfeit solutions, but a successful action is an extremely interdisciplinary endeavor. Regardless of your experience and intellect, there will be aspects of the solution that you don’t know.

For example, you may know about intellectual property rights law as it applies to a bottle design in the United States. But you might not have any experience prosecuting similar cases in Cambodia. You may have experience reducing product tampering, but not in deterring container theft in international free trade zones.

The range of disciplines

To deal with the complex nature of counterfeiting, the interdisciplinary approach reaches out to a number of areas. In our MSU Anti-Counterfeit and Product Protection (A-CAPP) Initiative, we look at these disciplines to develop insights:

• Criminal Justice gives us a perspective on the criminals and the crime.

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