| | | |

Readying a Patent Portfolio for Sale

In years gone by, companies with extensive patent portfolios were loathe to sell these assets, strongly preferring to license them.  These Patent Licensing Agreements (PLA) came in several flavors, most had some form of royalty payments for the licensor and the fundamental was that ownership of the patents remained with the original owner, i.e., the company granted the patent(s).
While not totally different today, much has changed in the disposition of thousands of US patents.  Patents are now sold in much greater numbers than in decades past.  Some of the reasons for this are:
·         Corporate decision to shut down or sell of an operating division
·         Near term need to financially rescue another part of the corporation
·         Shift in corporate direction/strategy
·         Pay a court imposed penalty
Patent sales are now so commonplace that online IP reporter sites like www.IAM.comrecently devoted a webinarto the patent selling process.  This process, as one can see, includes seven steps.  The assumption here is that the seller completed a validity check to the extent possible on each patent offered for sale. 
It is noteworthy under Step 6 that the biggest buyers of patents review around 1,000 seller packages per year.  This clearly puts the onus on the seller to develop a first class patent package.  It also suggests that this is a buyers’ market putting more of a burden on the seller to find ways to get the most value for its assets.

Keywords: patent, patent portfolio, licensing, PLA, Patent Licensing Agreement, commercialization. 

Similar Posts

  • | | | |

    Simon & Schuster Joins Forces With Author Solutions To Rip Off Writers | David Gaughran

    Simon & Schuster Joins Forces With Author Solutions To Rip Off Writers | David Gaughran: The (self) publishing business is pretty ugly, just like the inventor help business. Let’s take ’em for all they’ve got! When I read of this press announcement the other day, a flurry of questions flittered through my mind. And now that we have the skinny on it, hope that the warnings raised here by David twitter through cyberspace. “So crooked they can’t…

  • | | | |

    The global energy challenge: Awash with carbon : Nature News & Comment

    The global energy challenge: Awash with carbon : Nature News & Comment: Happy days, all you can eat at the energy banquet. Or would that be happy daze.:-( This is a great visual summary from the article in 2-page brochure and graphics of our fuel consumption ways. Note how much China has passed the USA and how much of Chinese energy is from coal. Ouch! ‘via Blog this’

  • | |

    Misery Index (and Pain Index)

    The Misery Index hasn’t been talked about much since the 1970s when unemployment was really high and inflation was double digit. The argument is that high unemployment is painful, and high inflation is painful, so when you add the two together you get a good measure of the misery throughout the economy. Both presidents Ford and Carter had average Misery indexes of 16, but Carter when out of office in 1980 leaving a Misery Index…

  • | |

    Here Are the Biggest Crowdfunding Campaigns of 2015 – Bloomberg Business

    Here Are the Biggest Crowdfunding Campaigns of 2015 – Bloomberg Business: Crowdfunding really hit its stride this year with people just crowding in to jump on the bandwagon of new and innovative ideas. Of course great fundraising ideas are for books and movies, especially those that sequels or follow-ons with an established groupie base. Veronica Mars, the high-school sleuth, is and example from last year on Kickstarter. (See our blog here,) This years list from…

  • |

    Generative AI Tools in 2024 (2 of n)

    (First published on ScenarioPlans.com. Repeat with permission.) Top 10 GenAI Engines with Starting Price and Access. Sorted by most used. GenAI Engine Free? Monthly Charge Start Live Data Web/App? ChatGPT Yes $0.002 for 1K … No Both GPT-4 (ChatGPT 4o) Yes? $20/month No Both Claude Yes $20/month for Pro Yes Both Gemini Yes $20/month Advanced Yes Both MS Copilot No? $30/month (w/annual) Yes Both Perplexity Yes $20/month for Pro Yes Both Lumen5 Yes $19/month for…

  • |

    Google got it wrong. The open-office trend is destroying the workplace. – The Washington Post

    Google got it wrong. The open-office trend is destroying the workplace. – The Washington Post: This is a great article about the “open air” cubicle farm for workers. Or “fish bowl” for employees. Telecommuting would help this work better. If someone has a real deadline and real work that needs to be done, they could work at home. Try to schedule meetings priority days so people who need to meet can all be on campus…