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Exploitation and Dissemination Plan: the New Expectations of the European Commission

The exploitation and dissemination plan has become a strategic component of projects funded by the European Union. Once seen as an administrative document, it is now assessed as a genuine driver of impact, results valorisation, and return on investment for society. The European Commission has clearly strengthened its requirements, particularly under Horizon Europe, and now expects project promoters to adopt a structured, credible, and results-oriented approach.

Understanding these new expectations is essential to maximize funding success and ensure the long-term achievement of project objectives.

Why the exploitation and dissemination plan has become central

The European Commission no longer funds only research or innovation activities; it invests in concrete solutions capable of generating economic, societal, environmental, or policy impact. The exploitation and dissemination of results plan is therefore the tool that demonstrates how the project will:

  • spread the knowledge produced

  • valorise results beyond the consortium

  • transform results into real-world uses, products, services, or public policies

  • ensure lasting impact after the end of EU funding

It is no longer enough to describe generic communication actions. Applicants must prove that each key result has clear potential, identified target groups, and a realistic valorisation strategy.

A logic driven by impact and results

The first major evolution concerns the direct link between project results and exploitation strategy. The Commission expects a much more precise approach:

  • Identification of exploitable results from the proposal stage

  • Description of the exploitation potential for each result

  • Analysis of markets, end users, or beneficiaries

  • A tailored strategy depending on whether the result is a technological innovation, methodology, dataset, standard, or policy recommendation

A credible plan relies on a clear segmentation of results. Not all outputs have the same purpose: some will be commercially exploited, others will contribute to public policies, standards, or the scientific community. This differentiation is now essential.

Better defined dissemination target groups

Dissemination can no longer be broad or purely academic. The European Commission expects:

  • A precise identification of target audiences: industry, SMEs, public decision-makers, local authorities, NGOs, researchers, citizens

  • Messages adapted to each audience

  • Relevant channels: specialised conferences, professional networks, European platforms, sector media, working groups, standardisation networks

It is also important to demonstrate that dissemination supports exploitation. For example, sharing results with industrial clusters can prepare the future uptake of a technology, while engaging public authorities can facilitate integration into policies or regulations.

A credible and anticipated exploitation strategy

The European Commission emphasizes anticipation. Exploitation must not start at the end of the project. Evaluators look for:

  • Consortium partners with a clear role in valorisation

  • A defined intellectual property strategy: patents, licensing, open source, publications

  • Analysis of entry barriers, risks, and competition

  • Consideration of business models where relevant

For projects close to market, the business dimension becomes central: go-to-market strategy, potential customers, value chains, industrial partnerships. Even for upstream projects, a pathway toward concrete use is expected.

The strengthened role of knowledge and data management

With the rise of Open Science and Open Data, the European Commission requires a clear articulation between:

  • open dissemination of knowledge

  • protection of results with high exploitation potential

Project promoters must explain how they balance publications, data sharing, and intellectual property protection. This coherence is an important evaluation criterion, as it reflects the consortium’s maturity in managing its strategic assets.

A living document throughout the project lifetime

The exploitation and dissemination plan is no longer static. It must be:

  • regularly updated

  • aligned with the evolution of results and context

  • connected to deliverables, impact indicators, and the overall project strategy

The Commission expects continuous monitoring, with adjustments based on opportunities, stakeholder feedback, or changes in markets and public policies.

The most common mistakes to avoid

Despite these requirements, some weaknesses frequently appear in proposals:

  • Confusing communication with dissemination

  • Describing standard actions with no link to project results

  • Overlooking non-commercial exploitation, especially in projects with societal impact

  • Failing to involve key partners in the valorisation strategy

  • Presenting an overly theoretical plan, disconnected from market or user realities

A strong plan must be project-specific, rooted in its ecosystem, and driven by clearly identified actors.

Towards a strategic and integrated approach

The European Commission’s new expectations reflect a deeper shift: every funded project must contribute tangibly to European priorities and generate sustainable impact. The exploitation and dissemination plan thus becomes a strategic tool, at the intersection of research, innovation, market uptake, and public policy.

For project promoters, this means developing the plan early, mobilising the right partners, and adopting a long-term vision. When well designed, it not only supports funding success but also maximizes the real value of the project far beyond its official duration.

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