Top 10 Patent Myths
Your brilliant idea needn't fall by the wayside simply because you don't want to deal with the patent process. We've shattered the top 10 myths so you can see your way clear to patenting your product.
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Given that most businesses aren't built on truly original
ideas, patents can seem like more trouble than they're worth.
However, integrating patents into your business plan, regardless of
whether you're an inventor, is one of the most overlooked
elements of a successful business.
Freelance licensing agent (read: Mr. I Know All About Patents So
You Can't Fool Me) Stan Weston gives us an idea of how
important patents can be. He came up with the G.I. Joe action
figure idea, and Hasbro offered Weston a choice of either $100,000
or $50,000 upfront, with a 1 percent royalty once sales passed $7
million. Weston chose the $100,000-and lost out on an estimated $20
million in royalties over the next 30 years.
While you may not see such drastic differences in earnings,
there are 10 myths about patents that may be holding you back from
getting the most out of the concept that got your business started
in the first place.
Myth 1: The
narrowing of equivalents makes it more difficult to get investors
on my side. Reliable, leading venture capital firms
and lending institutions bring on board consultants with excellent
technical knowledge to pick out good business plans. When you come
to the table with a patent-pending idea that's been
well-researched and profits projected, you're more likely to be
taken seriously, even if you don't have all the connections
with the big players as a newly minted entrepreneur. "I
believe investors or lenders are very impressed by patent
protection. Seldom will an angel invest in a project that does not
offer patent protection," said Jack Lander, president of the
United Inventors Association, vice president of the Yankee
Invention Exposition and founder of the Inventor's
Bookstore.
Myth 2: Since
it's becoming difficult to avoid infringement regardless of
what niche I'm in, I'm better off not taking a patent to
advertise my company as bait.
True, if you took out a patent for a rocking chair, you're
possibly infringing on a patent someone else took out for a chair.
That's why the claims section of the patent is so important. It
has to be worded carefully and with the help of a patent lawyer so
that you actually end up having more protection from infringement
lawsuit bounty hunters than you would without a patent.
Myth 3: There's
absolutely no competition out there for my business plans, so
there's no sense in spending money to patent any part of
it. There is always competition out there. There may
be no similar technology, but there are many things that can
perform the same function. Take the humble aluminum washboard. They
didn't just disappear when washing machines came on the market,
and in many ways, washboards are preferable to their mechanized
counterparts. One of the most beneficial things an entrepreneur can
do to continually outpace the competition is to trade marketing
strategies, customer-retention ideas and tips with other
entrepreneurs--in different sectors, of course. Patents give you an
excuse to participate in inventors-entrepreneurship conferences,
which is a great way to schmooze and get ideas you would never
think of otherwise.
Myth 4: If the
invention is "obvious to one skilled in the art," as the
United States Patent and Trademark Office terms it, the patent
won't be valid. Aren't you supposed to be an
optimist? The specific wording of the claims in your patent is the
key to patenting an idea that is already out there or
"obvious." "Just about everyone who does a patent
search is amazed at all the prior art that is identical, or nearly
so, with his or her invention," says Lander. Take U.S. Patent
5,771,778, for example. Just about everyone knows how to make
coffee, and that the smell of coffee is welcoming and makes clients
feel at home. That "obvious" application didn't stop
a coffee shop owner from filing a patent of "a device within a
device, one part of which contains a sensor designed to emit an
aroma when it senses a person's presence." So even a
marketing idea that can be essential to a business can be patented
if it's carefully worded.
Myth 5: It takes a
long time to license a patent, and I want to have something to show
by the second quarter next year. The USPTO recognizes
the time delay and is trying to speed things up by eliminating
paperwork wherever they can. Go to their Web site to apply
online, do prior art searches and check on the status of your
patent application. It may be too early for you to boast profits in
your press releases, but you can talk about how you're
different from competitors and why you're the leader in your
industry by grace of your expertise. Officially, they're called
"inchoate rights," otherwise known as bragging rights.
You can use them once your patent is pending. Darrel Adamson,
founder and president of Engrave-a-Crete, a manufacturer of decorative
concrete systems, cemented his company's expertise and
recognition from patent on up. "While I was waiting for the
USPTO to process my first patent, I coined terms for cutting
shallow designs and patterns in concrete that are now commonly used
and quickly spreading. The terms 'engraved concrete' and
'concrete engraving' are now used [to describe] a type of
decorative concrete."
| Patent Glossary | - Copyrights: These protect works of authorship,
composition or artistry. A copyright covers art for mugs, books,
sculptures, photos, computer programs, architecture, movies and
records, music compositions and recordings of a music
performance.
- Intellectual property (IP): The ownership of ideas.
Unlike tangible assets to your business such as computers or your
office, IP is a collection of ideas and concepts.
- Patent: A patent is granted by the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office of the right to stop others from making, using or
selling an invention in the United States for a limited period of
time. An idea itself is not patentable; patents are only
appropriate for useful things or methods of doing something.
- Trademarks: These cover the name or other symbol, such
as a logo, which represents the source of a product or service.
Sometimes the appearance of a product or its packaging can be
considered a trademark, often called a trade "dress." For
example, the name Coca-Cola® and the shape of a Coke®
bottle are both registered trademarks.
- Trade secret: Trade secret protection is available for
secrets used in the business. How a product is made or ingredients
that go into it, even customer lists, can be protected as a Trade
Secret. Source codes for computer programs and the formula for
Coca-Cola® are common examples. The critical requirement for
trade secret protection lies in maintaining the secret. Methods or
information revealed to the public cannot be protected under trade
secret laws.
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Myth 6:
"General" or wide-ranging patents are more likely to have
higher returns or royalties than specific ones.
Minutiae makes for successful niche-building, even though the
thought of making your claims cover as much ground as possible is
much more ambitious. Take CEPTYR's lead, and focus on one area that is your
core expertise to start off with. CEPTYR Inc. founders William
Ettouati and Nick Tonks decided to focus exclusively on a very
specific kind of drug, and they're now sharing a sandbox with
pharmaceutical giant Eli Lily just four years post-inception.
Unlike most biotech start-ups, Ettouati and Tonks figured out what
their unique specialization was and stuck to it. "Our goal is
to develop the first drug of this kind, and we gained Eli
Lily's confidence on the strength of our proprietary drug
development technology," says the 35-year old Tonks.
Myth 7: If I need to
change my business focus, then the money I invested in filing a
patent will be wasted. You may not make money from a
patent by applying it yourself, but you can pursue licensing
royalties. Craig Nabat, 32, changed his focus from marketing his
own invention, FINDIT, a device for locating keys and other lost
items, to including other inventors' products in his business.
When determining the value of your product or service, there are
two ways of pricing: "cost-plus" and "demand."
Cost-plus incorporates your fixed and variable costs and adds your
desired profit margin (the "plus"). Demand pricing is
based on what the market will bear-or what you can
"demand" for your proprietary product. That said,
you'll have to find the intrinsic value in what you
could've delivered to market. What cost savings, what
productivity increases, does your product provide?
Once you figure out the monetary benefit, you can price your
product accordingly so you deliver value, but you're also
maximizing your sale price. Don't forget to factor in the
lifecycle of your product or service: Will customers come back for
more, and how soon?
Myth 8:
Concentrating on a single patented product is amateurish-it gives
the impression of a fly-by-night business that'll vanish once
the product novelty wears off. Patents can provide
what is known as a "maintenance" aspect to your business
that doesn't require, well, maintenance. A healthy, small,
continuous income is sometimes called a maintenance brand, product
or service. Inventor-entrepreneur John Janning generated
respectable profits from a product that needs very little
maintenance, freeing up his time for marketing and inventing. It
was the uniqueness of the product-a Christmas tree light string
that stays lit regardless of whether a light burns out, falls out
or is placed in the socket incorrectly-that finally got it into
Lowe's and Target this past Christmas. This type of underlying
value attributed to your patented product prevents a low seating in
terms of market share from being looked upon as liabilities to
potential investors.
Myth 9: The industry
I'm in is mature-I can rely on other, more certain, marketing
tactics. Starting out in an industry that's
already mature means you have to work harder to communicate and
reinforce the consistent values of your company, instead of
grafting on a mélange of different faces. There's nothing
like an in-house-developed patented product or service to build
long-term trust and show that, even though you're a newcomer,
you definitely know what you're doing. "The patents I hold
are crucial to our marketing, our status as an innovative company
and [our ability to keep] competitors at bay," Adamson
says.
Not only can you name a patented product or service, but you can
develop a consistent and distinctive advertising message around
your company's main focus instead of going with whatever
promotion fads are hot at the moment among your competitors.
Myth 10: Everyone
who was at the staff meeting where we brainstormed gets to put
their name on the patent. You'd be paying
honorariums like mad if this were true! Unless the inventor is
yourself or a partner in the business, royalties from patent
licenses generally go to the company, not the employees who came up
with the invention. The company is the assignee-the person or legal
entity that has actual ownership of the patent.
Many entrepreneurs have figured out that aggressively pursuing
patents is an integral long-term strategy that pays off.
There's nothing like knowing you can do something to build
confidence, and holding a patent is a constant reminder to yourself
that your business idea will work.
The Skinny on Patents There are three main kinds of patents:
utility, plant and design: | | 1. Utility patents cover
inventions like machines, something you manufacture, a method of
doing something, a chemical or DNA sequence or the method of its
use, and products of genetic engineering. Utility patents are
effective from the date the patent is issued for a period up to 20
years from the date of filing.
2. Plant patents may be granted to anyone who invents or
discovers, and asexually reproduces, a new variety of certain kinds
of plants. There's also a 20-year period for this one. 3. Design patents cover the ornamental appearance of a
useful device but not its function. For example, a unique shape of
a toy building block can be patented as both a design and utility
invention. A design patent has a term of 14 years from the date
it's granted. |
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Jasmine Pui has patents pending in the areas of horticulture,
museum and curatorial arts, medical instrumentation and artificial
organs.
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