When it comes to
product or service development, these activities should be thought of as
mutually beneficial, not necessarily mutually exclusive.
Patenting
involves securing ones intellectual property rights by obtaining a grant of a
patent, thus protecting the novel features of the invention from being made,
used, offered for sale, or sold by someone other than the inventor. Branding on
the other hand, is the process of developing a products identity within the
minds of the consumer. Patenting is accomplished by securing a patent, and
branding is accomplished, typically, through marketing efforts. However, these
development efforts need not, and should not occur in a vacuum.
Unless
the product, method or process in question is truly a commodity and incapable
of patent protection, branding alone will probably not provide the outcome the
owner is seeking. Yes, branding alone may make a product successful.
Unfortunately, if the product is not protected, it will likely not be the
original owner who enjoys that success. For example, small and medium sized
business owners who concentrate solely on branding in order to secure the
market place will invariably be thwarted in their efforts by large corporations
having better access to marketing and distribution channels.
Normally,
what happens in these cases is that as the product becomes a commercialized
success, competition enters. If this competition has access to cheaper
manufacturing, a larger distribution network, and sufficient initial
capitalization, the competition will be able to capitalize on and then take
over or redevelop the brand, leaving the original owner in their wake. This can
be accomplished by, among things, locking them out of major distribution
channels, and creating lower cost products. Without some form of protection
there is little the smaller business owner can do. For example, when the worlds
largest company is a retail store, and is Chinas eighth largest trading
partner, you have very little chance of out-sourcing, out-marketing, or
out-selling them. So whats a business to do? Simple, protect yourself!
By securing a patent on the product, process, method, or article of
manufacture, the business arms itself by protecting the intellectual property.
As such, if your product is novel, that is to say new or improved over existing
products, then your product may be capable of patent protection. If so, and if
you acquire for example a U.S. patent, you will have twenty years wherein you
can stop all others from making, using, offering for sale, selling, or
importing the invention into this country. However, patents are only for
non-commodity products. One caveat is required: in obtaining patent protection,
it is imperative that the inventor seek a qualified patent attorney. All
patents are not created equal, and there are many ways to pay for and obtain a
patent that will have little to no commercial value. Yes, the process and fees
are expensive. Frankly, the system is designed to be that way in order to
discourage people from patenting products that have no hope of
commercialization.
One of the biggest reasons I hear for not obtaining
patent protection is the false belief that even if achieved, a smaller business
would not be able to enforce it against a larger entity. This is simply not
true. In fact, the opposite is true. There are numerous law firms that actively
seek smaller business clients in patent infringement matters and will represent
them at little to no cost to the client. In these cases, the larger the
infringing entity, the more infringement typically takes place. Consequently,
it is exactly these patent infringement cases that firms seek and will
represent clients on a contingency basis.
Of course, there are also
many reasons to not patent something. In the end, it is a business decision
that only you can make, and it should be treated as any other business
decision. In this manner, simply forgoing patent protection because of
preconceived ideas about the market, costs, and enforcement, without looking
into what amount of protection is available, is akin to sticking your head in
the sand. The days when one could rely on these preconceived notions are gone,
and in todays competitive economic environment, we need to ascertain, strive
for, and obtain all of the commercial advantages that are available to us. At
the very least, you should investigate what you may be giving up.
Copyright 2006 by Paparella & Associates.
ABOUT THE
AUTHOR
Mr. Paparella is Principal of Paparella & Associates, an
intellectual property law firm specializing in patent and trademark
prosecution:
Serving Atlanta, Austin, Dallas, Detroit, Grand Rapids,
Houston, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Miami, San Antonio, San Jose, Seattle, and Tampa.
Paparella & Associates is uniquely situated to deliver the highest
quality representation. Representing clients in all intellectual property
matters including,
Patents, Trademarks, Copyrights, Infringement Matters,
Clearance Opinions, Freedom to Operate Opinions, and Litigation.
For more
information visit us on the web at
http://www.USPatPend.com
or http://www.PaparellaLaw.com.















