westernman
Well-Known Member
This would seem pretty important at this time because any value that you may attach to your invention is only available to you if you have the IP sorted out and tightly protected and in your control.
The value of something which works goes far beyond a theorectical bit of IP which is patented. If you have a patent which stops the competition from doing the same thing or something similar to you, so much the better. But just something which is too complex to emulate does not need to rely on patents for protection.
If you do have a good patent attorney, I think that they should be able to give you some advice on the options for a commercial agreement with your business partners, be they investors, licensees, or manufacturers etc.
Good patent attorneys cost big money. And are generally poor advisors for business partners and how to find licensees, manufacturers etc. You can easily burn through 10K for a basic patent and basic advice and far more for anything complex or for an attorney who really understands you invention and how best to protect it.
I believe that the agreement you would make with a well resourced professional investor would perhaps be different from one you make with some one who is investing 'a couple of grand'.
Certainly - and the first thing they will ask for is some one experienced for the CEO role and secondly for a working prototype.
Just for info, the lawyers fees for drafting the agreement with our professional investor cost nearly 50K euros.
She also spends a lot of time finding the gaps in competitor's patents and their claims and working round them, so you can never be sure that IP can insulate you from the big boys if they want to move in to your business area.
Patents are one form of IP protection. Copyright, secrecy and difficulty to copy are others.