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A CEO’S GUIDE TO IP
HOW TO USE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
TO DRIVE BUSINESS STRATEGY
Author: Jeffrey Maddox
Jeffrey Maddox brings more than 25 years of management experience in financial services and
consulting to his role as Managing Director of CPA Ventures, the corporate development arm of
Computer Patent Annuities (CPA), a global intellectual property software and services company.
Contributors: Jeremy Phillips
© 2007 Computer Patent Annuities Limited, www.cpaglobal.com. All rights reserved
Disclaimer: All information, materials and opinions are provided for general information purposes only
and on the understanding that none of the content constitutes legal or other professional advice. Any
views provided by third party contributors do not necessarily reflect those of CPA.
2
INTRODUCTION
Introduction p3
What is IP? p4
How valuable is my IP? p6
IP for business strategy p8
Conclusion p9
10 questions every CEO should ask p10
You don’t have to be an IP professional to understand the
importance of intellectual assets in today’s information age.
The old industrial ‘bricks and mortar’ era has been replaced by a
powerful knowledge-based economy, with ideas and innovation
as the new currency. In this environment, IP is no longer just a
means of protecting innovation – it’s also a potent business asset
and a means of capturing value. IP Rights have become the
most important form of competitive power that any company can
own; they are the foundation for a product’s market dominance
and continuing profitability, the basis for an almost unrivalled
method of revenue-generation, through licensing or
merchandising, and are often the key objective in mergers and
acquisitions (M&A).
Where the core of a company is its IP, it’s important for
executive management to understand the extent of these rights
and what IP can do for them. However, the management of a
company’s IP Rights is a challenging, fast-moving and, often,
unpredictable task. So long as intangible assets continue to play
a pivotal role in bolstering a company’s bottom line, the methods
in which IP Rights are created and enforced will also continue to
fluctuate and expand. Already, the growth in importance of IP
Rights has created new, previously unthought of methods of
exploiting and using it. This in turn has generated an unheralded
surge in filings and registrations, created new challenges in terms
of accounting, taxation and valuation (many of which are still to
be resolved) and placed added pressure on the systems in place
to record and monitor IP Rights, causing them to be assessed
and often overhauled. At the same time, it has produced a
much-needed and successful IP management industry, where
companies outsource to off-shore services and tax havens to
better exploit and protect their IP.
Of course, it hasn’t traditionally been part of a CEO’s role to
track the management of the company’s IP; this has previously
been considered a legal issue, the domain of corporate lawyers.
IP is just one of many concerns to be factored into overall
corporate policy, along with more obvious short-term topics, such
as cash flow, customer retention, supplier sourcing, tax reporting
and recruitment.
Yet, as IP has become a business driver, it’s becoming
imperative for CEOs to build a basic knowledge of the rights the
company owns in order to properly direct its future and account
for its worth. Just as IP experts are not CEOs, CEOs are not
necessarily IP gurus; however, each needs to know and
understand the position of the other if they are to meet each
other’s needs. After all, IP, well-nurtured, can provide the bedrock
of a company’s security, as well as enhance its identity and
brand value.
CONTENTS
3
Intellectual property, or IP, is a loose term for the property
that exists in the things people create (such as inventions,
medicines, music and movies), as well as the information
that becomes valuable because not everyone has access to
it or can use it (trade secrets, customer or supplier
databases and business and product names). Some IP is
protected by statute law (most countries have special
enactments governing patents, trademarks, designs,
copyright and domain names). Copyright is protected by
default, but all other rights need to be registered,
monitored and renewed. Other IP is protected almost by
chance, through the courts applying their own judge-made
case law; for example, to protect confidential information
or the ‘passing-off’ of another person’s rights.
Why does IP matter?
The sentient CEO gets two answers. First, IP Rights
underpin a company’s investment in its new products,
processes, marketing ploys and in its relationship with its
customers. The current economic climate provides
immense rewards: a music group that is popular in one
country is increasingly likely to be successful in many.
Similarly, products as diverse as fast food, technology and
automotives do not depend on a specific geographical
location, but can be sold and marketed everywhere.
Secondly, the formal IP Rights system that protects a
company’s intellectual output renders the IP a valuable
commodity. Patents, trademarks, copyright and domain
names are powerful competitive advantages because
individuals and corporations own them and can enforce
them in the courts.
IP Rights protect the results of creativity once they hit
the marketplace. For example, the cost of mass-producing
a finished medicine is derisory in comparison to the
billions it takes to create and test a typical pharmaceutical
product. If it weren’t for patent protection, many
organisations would think twice about embarking on the
expensive R&D needed to produce new product research
in the first place. IP allows them to justify the initial
expenditure because it provides them with a guarantee
that they will at least have the opportunity to regain their
investment once the product has hit the marketplace.
In many areas (eg fashion, software and pre-recorded
music) copying is rife, even where IP Rights are in place.
Even so, imitators who enjoy a life which is both
profitable and untroubled prefer to copy products that are
ill-protected by IP Rights or whose rights owners pay less
attention to enforcement.
With a properly maintained IP portfolio in place, a
company can develop, acquire and use its IP Rights as
competitive weapons to capture and defend markets,
outflank rivals, and increase market value and revenue.
Companies that ignore the growing value and power of IP
do so at their peril.
Do you know what IP you own?
Companies cannot realise the value of their IP unless they
first understand what it is that they own. To grasp this,
the first step should be to conduct an audit to measure
the patents, trademarks, domain names and associated
IP Rights in their portfolio.
An IP audit shows CEOs what intellectual assets are
at their disposal and how useful they are likely to remain.
This is vital. For example, a company may rely on a
patent to keep competitors from copying its product, but
the maximum life of a patent is quite short. If that
company does not have a strategy for maintaining the
product once its patent has expired, how does it expect to
retain its market share once other non-brand products
enter the marketplace?
As well as tracking the patents close to expiry, an IP
audit shows the CEO how much he depends on IP that is
owned by others. The company’s software, its mailing lists
– even the music played in its public spaces – may all be
licensed in from other IP owners. Few businesses are
entirely independent of ‘third party IP’, so the CEO
should know which bits of his operation are subject to the
continued co-operation of outsiders. Similarly, companies
will often work together to co-produce IP. A study of
patenting trends in hybrid technology produced by CPA in
2006 revealed a considerable amount of co-assignment
activity among the world’s leading automobile
manufacturers: ‘We found several examples of cross-
company collaborations, in order to get hybrid products to
market,’ said Christian Bunke, Product Manager, CPA.
Both share the IP and should profit from the associated
rights equally, but this can only be ensured if a succinct
IP strategy is put in place to monitor its use.
In addition, an audit of patent rights will reveal the
patent rights that can be licensed to generate revenue to
4
WHAT IS IP?
the business itself; it will also uncover deadwood –
patent rights that the business is paying to maintain,
but which are not used. Rather than being abandoned,
these too, could be licensed to generate a potentially
lucrative revenue stream, but only if they are of use to
someone else.
An audit focusing on trademarks, on the other hand, will
help a CEO to chart the future of the company’s products
in its marketplace, and plot a path for future expansion.
Senior management needs to be informed of the extent of a
company’s trademark rights before it decides to move into
new markets or territories. Trademark rights need to be
put in place first, in order to ensure that the company has
the freedom to trade in the new areas.
As with patent rights, a study of trademark rights will
also reveal those unused rights that can be licensed or sold
on to save the cost of maintenance. If you’ve invested time
and effort to build a brand, why let it lapse? The
trademarks that support an existing brand can easily be
sold or out-licensed. They can also be used to encourage
other businesses to co-operate with you in developing your
own. For example, if you work in retail and you think your
shop format may succeed in other locations, you can take
the capital-intensive route of buying or renting properties in
other locations, equipping those premises, recruiting and
training local staff. Or you can register a trademark,
assemble a confidential and copyright-protected operational
manual on how to run the shop, then get people to pay you
to use this IP package. That’s how IP-based business format
concepts, such as Starbucks, McDonalds, KFC and, more
recently, hairdressing salons, such as Toni & Guy, have
spread. The idea’s yours, but the investment risk belongs to
your licensees – and the better they do, the more valuable
your IP becomes.
Equally, the results of the audit of trademark rights
should always be compared with the company’s domain
name strategy. Are domain name registrations in place to
support the marketing of the brand in all relevant
territories? Are defensive registrations in place to ensure
that others aren’t using your brand for their own gain?
Knowing what you own is key to building a successful
IP strategy; one that will allow you to exploit maximum
value from your company’s creativity, while ensuring you
can chart your future in the marketplace without fear of
infringing or being infringed.
WHICH IP RIGHTS APPLY?
Intellectual property laws are designed to protect
different forms of subject matter, although in some
cases there is a degree of overlap. Legislation often
varies by jurisdiction, but it always shares in common
the intention of providing the ‘owner’ of the exclusive
rights with a monopoly on the copying or distribution of
a protected form of the ‘property’. Some rights exist
automatically, but most need to be registered and,
where appropriate, renewed.
Patents: a patent may be granted for a new, useful,
and non-obvious invention, and gives the patent
holder an exclusive right to commercially exploit the
invention for a certain period of time (typically 20
years from the filing date of a patent application,
dependent on the jurisdiction).
Trademarks: a trademark is a distinctive sign used to
distinguish the products or services of different
businesses. Trademarks can be registered to protect a
product’s brand identity (its name, logo, slogan and,
increasingly, shape, colour and sound, where
distinctive). Protection generally lasts for 10 years, but
can be renewed for additional periods of 10 years.
Domain names: such registrations identify a company
or its products and services on the Internet. Names can
be registered as generic top-level domains (gTLDs e.g.
.com) or by country (ccTLDs, e.g. .co.uk in the UK).
Industrial designs: this right protects the form of
appearance, style or design of an industrial object
(for example, spare parts, furniture, or textiles).
Copyrights: copyright automatically subsists in creative
and artistic works, giving the copyright holder the
exclusive right to control reproduction or adaptation of
such works for a certain period of time.
Trade secrets: These are secret, non-public
information concerning the commercial practices or
proprietary knowledge of a business. They are, or
should be, protected by confidentiality agreements.
5
Just like any other property, the value of IP is flexible: it
all depends on whether the company is buying or selling
it; what it is being securitised for; whether the valuation
is subject to accounting standards or financial reporting
conventions; whether the right’s validity has been tested
following a contested court action or is only presumptively
valid; and whether it is free from encumbrances or subject
to licenses, charges or other equities.
‘The context of the valuation is critical,’ explains Danny
Ryan from LECG Corporation. ‘For example, patents can
be worthless if they don’t come with the necessary know-
how or trade secrets to apply them. At present, there is no
standard method, but as CEOs and financial institutions
begin to understand more about IP valuation, it will result
in an increased belief in balance sheet values of IP as a
result.’(Source: presentation at IP Review Live in
February 2006.)
Until that point, those IP valuation experts who practise
their profession agree on one thing: given the different
reasons why IP Rights get valued and the different methods
of valuing them, companies should consider carefully what
purpose a valuation exercise is intended to achieve before
embarking on it. Bearing this in mind, CEOs should adopt
a mindset of sensible constructive scepticism when dealing
with any value-related issue and should not allow
themselves to be seduced into accepting a single sum as
representing the ‘true’ value of any item of IP.
This is not to say that a directional understanding of
IP’s value contribution to a product cannot already be
estimated. The valuation of IP has become a necessary
business skill, particularly in mergers and acquisitions
where management may be required to determine how
much of the purchase price should be attributable to
intangible assets. Management should start by first asking
whether the overall product is value producing, followed
by an assessment of IP’s contribution to that value.
General areas of examination include:
• Determining the product’s competitive position. That is,
is the product advantaged and economically profitable
(value creating)?
• If the product is advantaged, identifying the source of
the advantage from either a differentiation and/or relative
cost perspective.
• Identifying the specific product features and services
contributing to the product’s source of advantage.
• Linking IP, if any, to those product features and services.
• Assessing the degree to which IP has contributed to the
specific product features and services providing the
differentiation and cost advantage.
As IP becomes an integral part of business strategy,
its value should be understood before it is granted,
not just when it is bought or sold. Companies need to
understand the link between IP and market share if they
are to retain their competitive advantage, as one US
science and technology giant discovered when it decided
to cut back on its R&D spending as part of a larger
company-wide series of cuts in 2003. Unsurprisingly, the
reduction in R&D investment also led to a decline in the
number of patent disclosures, applications and grants.
Concerned that the short term cost savings in R&D and
IP were coming at the expense of long term value, a
project team was established to try and measure the
value of its R&D. What they actually did was measure
the value of its IP.
The balance sheet showed that the company was
investing approximately 4% of its sales in R&D, in excess
of $500 million annually. The project team assumed that
the value of R&D could be partly measured by the value
of the IP that it produced. In its case, IP generated
income in two main areas: licensing (a revenue that
would be lost without IP protection) and the profit from
higher margins charged for IP-protected products. They
found that licensing revenue accounted for about £100
million (or 20%) of annual R&D spending. They also
found that a significant share of the R&D investment
was earned back through the higher margins earned on
the IP-protected products. This was calculated by linking
the company’s current patent rights with the company’s
financial database, allowing for the measurement of
margins for IP-protected versus non-IP protected
products. In fact, on average, IP-protected margins were
8% higher than their non-protected counterparts.
This helped to reinforce the importance of IP (and R&D
spending) in the company. However, it didn’t serve as a push
to increase R&D spending; rather it prompted them to
analyse how to get more from the R&D investment that was
6
HOW VALUABLE IS MY IP?
already being made through IP registrations. As a result,
extra investment was dedicated to building the company’s
team of patent attorneys and the company’s business unit
managers were asked to incorporate the potential
advantages of IP into their strategic planning. After all, if IP
conveys a competitive advantage, companies should be
asking whether they are getting the most from that
advantage in terms of price and/or revenue growth.
Using IP to attract investment
The cost of developing new brands, innovative designs
and schemes for marketing or distributing them is
greater than most small and medium-sized businesses
can bear by themselves, so they have to borrow venture
capital or development cash from a bank; however,
that bank wants to know whether it will ever see that
money again. Carefully managed IP can help a company
to justify that investment. For example, Cambridge
Display Technology (CDT) was able to generate funds
through financial underwriting from Lloyds TSB Bank in
2004. ‘Validation of technology was key to assessing
patent worth, quantifying value in the process,’ said
Michael Black, Vice President of CDT. (Source:
presentation at IP Review Live in February 2006.)
Similarly, well-managed IP can help a company to
generate investment from venture capitalist (VC) and
private equity (PE) companies. IP is now a valuable
commodity and many VC and PE companies are
beginning to recognise the potential returns on
investment that this new asset can generate. As with the
initial investment in product developments, IP Rights
provide no guarantee that their owners will make money,
but they do provide some comfort to the lender that he
may one day see his money again.
IP-savvy companies can also use their IP portfolio to
negotiate themselves into a stronger position in cases of
M&A opportunities; a tidy IP portfolio ensures more
return in cases of sale, whereas the acquiring party
needs to be on the ball if it is to ensure that the IP it is
buying is in order.
Can IP protection reduce commercial risk?
Every statutory IP Right can blow up in your face, if it
turns out to have been invalidly registered. This
frequently occurs for patents, but also for trademarks and
designs. That’s why it’s so important to properly protect a
company’s creativity in the first place.
But for as long as you have those IP Rights, you still
have some comfort based on its deterrent effect and the
cost faced by your competitors in attacking it. Even an
invalid patent can ward off competitors for as long as it
takes to invalidate it. For example, Viagra is one of the
most successful products of our generation. Pfizer’s
patent was eventually held invalid in the UK, but not
before the company had built up a massive market
presence based on its powerful trademark.
But IP can only be protected commercially if it is
properly monitored. In the field of brands, for example,
counterfeiting provides a real and growing threat to
trademark registrations. According to some, counterfeit
goods account for 7-9% of world trade and rising (Toe Su
Aung, General Counsel at Batmark Ltd and chair of the
International Trademark Association’s Anti-
counterfeiting & Enforcement Committee. Source: IP
Review, issue 15, summer 2006). No branded goods are
safe, nor any country immune, but at present it is up to
the individual company to monitor protection of its own
brands. Counterfeiting erodes brand values and product
integrity and damages a company’s market share for
genuine brands. They can also cause injury and defraud
both governments and the general public. ‘Companies
need to be vigilant in defending the integrity of their
trademarks and urge regulators to enforce IP protection
laws vigorously,’ advises Toe Su Aung.
A market-aware CEO will not determine his business
strategy first, later considering what IP Rights are at his
7
disposal. Nor will he contemplate his IP Rights before
deciding how he can blend them into a business strategy.
Successful companies are aligning IP and business strategy
to use their IP Rights to maximise their market presence.
For example, when Nokia decided to enter
the US telecoms market, an immediate problem was that
the players already there, Motorola and the Japanese
tele-giants, were well entrenched. Those players had
cross-licensed the use of one another’s patents and Nokia
was afraid to infringe. Those patents were so many in
number, and so complex, that even the act of reading
them to see what they covered would have been a slow,
uncertain and extremely expensive activity. By the time
Nokia discovered whether it infringed them, most of them
would have lapsed or become obsolete, to be replaced by
new ones. So Nokia developed its own portfolio of patents.
It was then able to say: ‘Here are our patents. You may or
may not be infringing them, but if you let us into the club
we’ll cross-license to you, too.’ In doing this, Nokia gained
admittance to their target market.
IBM’s long-term business strategy reflects a different
approach to patent protection. When Big Blue made boxes,
it wanted computer users to be able to get hold of as much
software as possible. That’s why, when the debate over
software patents arose in the 1960s and 1970s, IBM
fought long, hard and unsuccessfully to ensure that
computer software was as unprotected as possible. Later,
IBM’s own huge segment of the hardware made it so
powerful a monopolist that it couldn’t enforce its IP
Rights against cheap PC clone-makers without risking
antitrust suits. Recognising the potential power of
software patents against the weakness of machine
patents, the company switched to software development
and is currently the most profitable software developer in
the world. It has since altered its approach again;
announcing at the end of 2006, a new patent policy to
promote innovation. ‘We are now the biggest supporters of
the open source development project,’ explains David
Kappos, IBM’s Vice President and assistant general
counsel for IP law. ‘Admittedly, this policy is not easily
reconcilable with our traditional IP strategy, but we are
convinced that it is the way to go for the future.’
Microsoft, in turn, is pushing for amendments to
international systems to better reflect the rising demands
for patents. Part of this is to help technology-rich
companies, such as its own, better use patent
registrations as a means of capturing value, but it also
wants to open up the procedure to companies who have,
to date, been unable to utilise the patent system due to
its prohibitive cost.
Using IP knowledge to beat the competition
IP is not only a legal and protective mechanism – by
looking at other people’s IP you can determine where you
need to invest money in R&D. IP profiling can give a CEO
not only the low-down on their own patents, but also on
those of their competitors, distributors, suppliers and
takeover targets. Patent analysis uses the information
provided by the registrars of statutory patent rights, as
well as information that appears on the face of patent
applications, to measure activity in the marketplace.
However, unless you’re an experienced patent examiner
or analyst, it can be difficult to decipher the results.
Fortunately, services already exist to assess the available
information on your behalf.
The information available from these services isn’t dull
nor difficult to utilise. It includes such valuable
information as: the names of inventors on your
competitors’ patent applications; the fields in which your
competitors are spending money trying to develop
products and services; the split of research activity
between different product sectors; and even data
concerning professional representatives.
Similarly, if you track which trademarks other
companies are registering, you’ll be able to assess
if they’re moving into new markets, potentially
threatening your business model. In the domain names
arena, conducting a WHOis and reverse WHOis
investigation will also enable to you to check which URLs
are available and what others have done before you to
launch a campaign in your key territories.
Once a CEO understands the basics of IP, they
can start to ask the following questions to make
8
IP FOR BUSINESS STRATEGY
WHAT IS PATENT ANALYTICS?
Consultative patent analysis services provide fast and
easy access to competitive information through
statistical analysis of registered patents (by jurisdiction,
geographical area and/or market segment). Often, the
findings will help a company to better align its corporate
IP strategy and plan its future in the marketplace;
however, patent analytics isn’t just about quantifying the
IP that a company owns or the activity of its
competitors, the results can also provide a boost to a
company’s bottom line by highlighting opportunities for
IP licensing, partnering and litigation that might
otherwise have remained unearthed. The potential
return on investment is huge; IBM Corporation, for
example, brought in nearly $1 billion in business
through licensing and IP collaborations in 2005.
But, as well as assessing whole industries from a
patent analytics perspective, patent analysis can also
assess activity by country, particularly in emerging
markets. By assessing the most popular classes for both
foreign and national filings, patent analytics reports are
able to highlight future trends in the country and
industry sector. Likewise, studying patent habits from a
geographical perspective enables companies to assess
territories on the basis of innovation, highlighting the
technology hotbeds for various industries – valuable
information for businesses planning expansion.
9
CONCLUSION
As all CEOs should now be aware, ours is no longer a
culture of bricks and mortar assets; we are operating in a
knowledge-based economy in which the ownership and
management of intangible assets, such as IP, is directly
linked to corporate success and failure. In such an
environment, protecting, developing and exploiting IP
assets should be at the very forefront of business strategy;
however, for many companies, this is not yet the case.
Ultimately, the growth in value of IP necessitates a step
change in the manner in which companies and, by
extension CEOs, view and utilise the IP assets that they
own. Properly managed, IP can be a source of innovation,
creativity and corporate growth. But to succeed, it needs to
be understood at boardroom level. Trademarks, patents,
domain names, design rights and other forms of IP
interlink with every aspect of a business – from the way in
which it markets its products and services to the way its
assets are reported financially. Companies need to
recognise this importance if they are to maximise the
benefits to all sides of the business, and to ensure that any
move into a new market or business area is supported by
the requisite IP. But this needn’t be as complicated as it
first sounds. Once a CEO recognises the value of its
corporate IP, there are some important questions they
need to ask their IP department. These are summarised on
the next two pages.
IP work for them:
(1) Can we profit from our IP?
‘Twenty-five years ago, IP was simply registered as a
defensive tool,’ said Bruce Berman of Brody Associates.
‘Today we know it as an asset that can be exploited for
financial return.’ This is certainly true when it comes to
selling or licensing unwanted IP, which may be very good
in itself, but not related to any goods or services the
business is trading in. IP Rights can also be mortgaged
or securitised, but individual industrial rights are likely
to be highly valued if they are not secured as part of
the business as a going concern. An exception here is
copyright, where ‘Bowie bonds’ give the IP owner the
chance to borrow a large sum, repayable through
relatively stable and predictable royalty income over a
long period of time.
Further reading: ‘Closing the innovation value gap’,
Jeff Maddox, IAM (January 2006)
(2) How much is it worth?
The answer depends on the reason for asking the
question. A wise CEO will hold his company’s IP in high
esteem privately, but remain cautious about putting a
high figure to its value in public. That way he won’t
encourage inflated expectations among shareholders,
speculators or employees. ‘Value your IP as any other
asset,’ advises CPA’s Jeff Maddox. But remember, it’s
difficult to value IP, so seek expert advice in order to
tailor the valuation to the IP Rights in question; for
example, as they can be renewed, trademark and domain
names are valued in a completely different way to a
company’s fixed-term patent rights.
Further reading: ‘A capital market approach to IP
valuation’, Jeff Maddox, IAM (June 2005); ‘What your
domain name is really worth’, Dominic Speller, MIP
(June 2006); ‘How to value your IP’, Robert Wulff,
IP Review/www.ipreview.com/ip-strategy
(3) Can we make money out of IP licensing?
You can if you create products that lots of people want to
pay for. Where there is no demand, there’s no big money.
That’s why companies spend so much time marketing
their brands. Look how Intel, by advertising direct to the
public, were able then to charge manufacturers for using
their ‘Intel inside’ brand. ‘Non-core licensing is like
playing the lottery,’ explains Peter Spours, formerly Vice
President at Thinkfire and now head of IP at TomTom.
‘Winners are the rare exception. For the best chance of
success, companies need to align their corporate and IP
strategies, focusing on the lucrative rights they own.’
You need to understand your assets, quantify them as
strategic business aims and understand your market to
generate revenue through licensing. Beware of the
‘illusion of exclusion’; licensing valuable technologies
brings greater profit than keeping them to yourself.’
Further reading: ‘How to exploit patents for profit’,
Peter Spours, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/patents
(4) What is the tax position of our IP?
In a word, complex. Transfer pricing rules and
withholding tax can affect transactions between
companies in the same group when, for example, a
tax-efficient IP holding company in the Netherlands
Antilles licenses the use of ‘its’ IP to companies
elsewhere in the world. On the plus side, IP development
costs can reduce the tax bill. ‘Careful tax consideration
throughout the life cycle is key,’ says Isabel Verlinden
from PriceWaterhouseCoopers. ‘R&D, corporate
partnering and licensing all have an impact on the tax
status of IP, yet many companies only consider their tax
position as an afterthought, which can often be a costly
mistake. Rules and responsibilities must be defined in
agreements with third parties.’ Keep your accountants
informed and watch for major shifts in direction. Only by
properly recording and auditing the value of your IP will
you be able to assess your tax position.
Further reading: ‘A Haven for Tax?’, Isabel Verlinden,
IP Review/www.ipreview.com/ip-strategy
(5) What is the most efficient way of
managing our IP?
Obtaining, enforcing and exploiting IP is not a party trick
– it’s a skill that is acquired through patient study,
professional qualification and on-the-job training. Some
businesses outsource all their IP work and it looks a lot
cheaper. For many businesses this may be the best course,
particularly those that are not IP-intensive (the retail
clothing sector, for example). However, businesses can
usually find something useful for their IP department to
do if the IP work doesn’t fully occupy them, while some
companies that outsource their IP work find that they fail
10
10 QUESTIONS EVERY CEO
SHOULD ASK
11
to budget for unexpected contingencies, such as having to
defend an expensively acquired patent. Ultimately, the IP
department needs to raise its profile in the company, by
showing its value in terms of revenue and by explaining the
importance of IP to the business as a whole.
Further reading: ‘A recipe for success’, Paula Nelson,
IP Review/www.ipreview.com/interviews
(6) Are we doing enough to combat IP crime?
IP crime should nnot be ignored since it generates illicit
income that cannot be easily laundered and is thus best
‘invested’ in further IP crimes. Information sharing with
competitors and co-operation with the enforcement
authorities are both strongly recommended, though they
will always be disruptive and often initially futile. Bring
private prosecutions if the authorities are unwilling or
under-resourced: even a token sentence following a
conviction will pave the way for the recovery of the
proceedings of crime.
Further reading: ‘Does crime pay?’, Toe Su Aung,
IP Review/www.ipreview.com/ip-strategy
(7) Is IP litigation the only option?
No. Arbitration is often favoured as a means of getting a
binding decision where two sides fall out, while mediation
has become increasingly popular as a means of enabling
the warring factions to talk their problems through and
reach their own decision. In short, arbitration is good at
dealing with problems attached to the past (‘did we act
outside the scope of our IP license?’), while mediation is
good for disputes that reach into the future (‘this license
isn’t working and makes no business sense, so how can we
patch it up?’).
Further reading: ‘A strategy for enforcement’, Samantha
Frida, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/domains
(8) Should we have IP insurance?
If you are in a sector in which your competitors neither sue
nor are sued, or if you are so large and wealthy that you
can absorb any amount of IP litigation expense without
noticing it, IP insurance is not for you. If your business is
very small, you probably can’t afford its fairly steep
premiums (which are tailored to the risks borne by the
underwriters). If you’re somewhere between the two, you
may well want to consider it seriously. Case-studies have
illuminated both the virtues of IP insurance and its
shortcomings – for both companies and attorney firms. The
best advice is not to let your mind be made up once and for
all – revisit the issue regularly, on the basis of what your
business needs at any given point in its trading cycle.
Further reading: ‘Made in Canada’, Rob Macdonald,
IP Review/www.ipreview.com/software; ‘Going Global’,
Margaret Briffa, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/ip-strategy
(9) How can we monitor our competitors’ IP?
Statutory IP Rights create a trail of both electronic and
paper information that you can use. Warning note: much
‘current’ information is out of date. A patent filed by a
competitor today will often tell you what it was spending
its R&D cash on three or four years ago, but not
yesterday. However, in many industries it can take years
to get a product to market. Assessing patent filings in
such instances provides an indicator of activity. It can also
help you to assess your business model in comparison to
industry trends.
Further reading: ‘Reveal your competitive advantage’,
Jason Resnick, IAM (January 2006); ‘The secret of our
success’, ‘Unlock your IP’, Jason Resnick, IAM (CHECK);
Marc Kaufman, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/patents
(10) I understand IP, but what is IA and IC?
The honest answer is that they’re all the same thing,
viewed from different angles. IP addresses the fact that
intellectual property behaves like property: you can buy it,
rent it, exclude other people from it. IA (intellectual asset)
focuses on the fact that it’s an asset rather than merely a
liability: it can create value through strategic deployment,
through growing a thicket of IP Rights that competitors
cannot penetrate or (in the case of so-called ‘patent trolls’)
by laying down IP Rights that earn rent from passers-by
who chance upon them. IC (intellectual capital) describes
the ability of IP to influence the capital value of its owner
and to act as a mechanism that triggers the release of
capital when it is securitised. ‘There is value to be derived
from non-IP intangibles, or “I-Stuff”’, says Suzanne
Harrison. ‘Only a small percentage of “I-Stuff” can be
protected, but quantifying it can help companies better
understand the value of their assets and extract financial
return from them as a result.’
Further reading: Edison in the Boardroom, Suzanne
Harrison (2004); ‘Backing the ideas generation’, Dr
Caroline Sincock, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/interviews
Established in 1969, by attorneys and with over 38 years of legal experience and 40,000 clients, CPA is a leading legal services
provider. Our services are designed to enable clients to increase capacity, manage risk, and reduce costs – without compromising
quality. CPA is a multi-shore company with offices in 7 countries and a network of associates in every Intellectual Property jurisdiction.
For further information about CPA visit www.cpaglobal.com
CPA HEAD OFFICE:
CPA House, 11-15 Seaton Place,
St Helier, Jersey JE1 1BL,
Channel Islands
Tel +44 (0) 1534 888711
Fax +44 (0) 1534 888747
www.cpaglobal.com
REGIONAL OFFICES:
UK: Tel +44 (0) 1784 224 559
Germany: Tel +49 (0) 89 4567850
USA: Tel +1 (703) 739 2234
Australia: Tel +61 (0) 2 9993 3010
TMDS: Tel +44 (0) 20 7549 0660
CPA SOFTWARE SOLUTIONS:
UK: Tel +44 (0) 20 7549 0666
France: Tel +33 (0) 1 30 15 66 66
Germany: Tel +49 (0) 89 4567850
USA: Tel +1 (703) 739 2234
Canada: Tel +1 (613) 233 0519
Australia: Tel +61 (0) 2 9993 3000
ABOUT CPA
12

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ACEOsGuide

  • 1. A CEO’S GUIDE TO IP HOW TO USE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY TO DRIVE BUSINESS STRATEGY
  • 2. Author: Jeffrey Maddox Jeffrey Maddox brings more than 25 years of management experience in financial services and consulting to his role as Managing Director of CPA Ventures, the corporate development arm of Computer Patent Annuities (CPA), a global intellectual property software and services company. Contributors: Jeremy Phillips © 2007 Computer Patent Annuities Limited, www.cpaglobal.com. All rights reserved Disclaimer: All information, materials and opinions are provided for general information purposes only and on the understanding that none of the content constitutes legal or other professional advice. Any views provided by third party contributors do not necessarily reflect those of CPA. 2
  • 3. INTRODUCTION Introduction p3 What is IP? p4 How valuable is my IP? p6 IP for business strategy p8 Conclusion p9 10 questions every CEO should ask p10 You don’t have to be an IP professional to understand the importance of intellectual assets in today’s information age. The old industrial ‘bricks and mortar’ era has been replaced by a powerful knowledge-based economy, with ideas and innovation as the new currency. In this environment, IP is no longer just a means of protecting innovation – it’s also a potent business asset and a means of capturing value. IP Rights have become the most important form of competitive power that any company can own; they are the foundation for a product’s market dominance and continuing profitability, the basis for an almost unrivalled method of revenue-generation, through licensing or merchandising, and are often the key objective in mergers and acquisitions (M&A). Where the core of a company is its IP, it’s important for executive management to understand the extent of these rights and what IP can do for them. However, the management of a company’s IP Rights is a challenging, fast-moving and, often, unpredictable task. So long as intangible assets continue to play a pivotal role in bolstering a company’s bottom line, the methods in which IP Rights are created and enforced will also continue to fluctuate and expand. Already, the growth in importance of IP Rights has created new, previously unthought of methods of exploiting and using it. This in turn has generated an unheralded surge in filings and registrations, created new challenges in terms of accounting, taxation and valuation (many of which are still to be resolved) and placed added pressure on the systems in place to record and monitor IP Rights, causing them to be assessed and often overhauled. At the same time, it has produced a much-needed and successful IP management industry, where companies outsource to off-shore services and tax havens to better exploit and protect their IP. Of course, it hasn’t traditionally been part of a CEO’s role to track the management of the company’s IP; this has previously been considered a legal issue, the domain of corporate lawyers. IP is just one of many concerns to be factored into overall corporate policy, along with more obvious short-term topics, such as cash flow, customer retention, supplier sourcing, tax reporting and recruitment. Yet, as IP has become a business driver, it’s becoming imperative for CEOs to build a basic knowledge of the rights the company owns in order to properly direct its future and account for its worth. Just as IP experts are not CEOs, CEOs are not necessarily IP gurus; however, each needs to know and understand the position of the other if they are to meet each other’s needs. After all, IP, well-nurtured, can provide the bedrock of a company’s security, as well as enhance its identity and brand value. CONTENTS 3
  • 4. Intellectual property, or IP, is a loose term for the property that exists in the things people create (such as inventions, medicines, music and movies), as well as the information that becomes valuable because not everyone has access to it or can use it (trade secrets, customer or supplier databases and business and product names). Some IP is protected by statute law (most countries have special enactments governing patents, trademarks, designs, copyright and domain names). Copyright is protected by default, but all other rights need to be registered, monitored and renewed. Other IP is protected almost by chance, through the courts applying their own judge-made case law; for example, to protect confidential information or the ‘passing-off’ of another person’s rights. Why does IP matter? The sentient CEO gets two answers. First, IP Rights underpin a company’s investment in its new products, processes, marketing ploys and in its relationship with its customers. The current economic climate provides immense rewards: a music group that is popular in one country is increasingly likely to be successful in many. Similarly, products as diverse as fast food, technology and automotives do not depend on a specific geographical location, but can be sold and marketed everywhere. Secondly, the formal IP Rights system that protects a company’s intellectual output renders the IP a valuable commodity. Patents, trademarks, copyright and domain names are powerful competitive advantages because individuals and corporations own them and can enforce them in the courts. IP Rights protect the results of creativity once they hit the marketplace. For example, the cost of mass-producing a finished medicine is derisory in comparison to the billions it takes to create and test a typical pharmaceutical product. If it weren’t for patent protection, many organisations would think twice about embarking on the expensive R&D needed to produce new product research in the first place. IP allows them to justify the initial expenditure because it provides them with a guarantee that they will at least have the opportunity to regain their investment once the product has hit the marketplace. In many areas (eg fashion, software and pre-recorded music) copying is rife, even where IP Rights are in place. Even so, imitators who enjoy a life which is both profitable and untroubled prefer to copy products that are ill-protected by IP Rights or whose rights owners pay less attention to enforcement. With a properly maintained IP portfolio in place, a company can develop, acquire and use its IP Rights as competitive weapons to capture and defend markets, outflank rivals, and increase market value and revenue. Companies that ignore the growing value and power of IP do so at their peril. Do you know what IP you own? Companies cannot realise the value of their IP unless they first understand what it is that they own. To grasp this, the first step should be to conduct an audit to measure the patents, trademarks, domain names and associated IP Rights in their portfolio. An IP audit shows CEOs what intellectual assets are at their disposal and how useful they are likely to remain. This is vital. For example, a company may rely on a patent to keep competitors from copying its product, but the maximum life of a patent is quite short. If that company does not have a strategy for maintaining the product once its patent has expired, how does it expect to retain its market share once other non-brand products enter the marketplace? As well as tracking the patents close to expiry, an IP audit shows the CEO how much he depends on IP that is owned by others. The company’s software, its mailing lists – even the music played in its public spaces – may all be licensed in from other IP owners. Few businesses are entirely independent of ‘third party IP’, so the CEO should know which bits of his operation are subject to the continued co-operation of outsiders. Similarly, companies will often work together to co-produce IP. A study of patenting trends in hybrid technology produced by CPA in 2006 revealed a considerable amount of co-assignment activity among the world’s leading automobile manufacturers: ‘We found several examples of cross- company collaborations, in order to get hybrid products to market,’ said Christian Bunke, Product Manager, CPA. Both share the IP and should profit from the associated rights equally, but this can only be ensured if a succinct IP strategy is put in place to monitor its use. In addition, an audit of patent rights will reveal the patent rights that can be licensed to generate revenue to 4 WHAT IS IP?
  • 5. the business itself; it will also uncover deadwood – patent rights that the business is paying to maintain, but which are not used. Rather than being abandoned, these too, could be licensed to generate a potentially lucrative revenue stream, but only if they are of use to someone else. An audit focusing on trademarks, on the other hand, will help a CEO to chart the future of the company’s products in its marketplace, and plot a path for future expansion. Senior management needs to be informed of the extent of a company’s trademark rights before it decides to move into new markets or territories. Trademark rights need to be put in place first, in order to ensure that the company has the freedom to trade in the new areas. As with patent rights, a study of trademark rights will also reveal those unused rights that can be licensed or sold on to save the cost of maintenance. If you’ve invested time and effort to build a brand, why let it lapse? The trademarks that support an existing brand can easily be sold or out-licensed. They can also be used to encourage other businesses to co-operate with you in developing your own. For example, if you work in retail and you think your shop format may succeed in other locations, you can take the capital-intensive route of buying or renting properties in other locations, equipping those premises, recruiting and training local staff. Or you can register a trademark, assemble a confidential and copyright-protected operational manual on how to run the shop, then get people to pay you to use this IP package. That’s how IP-based business format concepts, such as Starbucks, McDonalds, KFC and, more recently, hairdressing salons, such as Toni & Guy, have spread. The idea’s yours, but the investment risk belongs to your licensees – and the better they do, the more valuable your IP becomes. Equally, the results of the audit of trademark rights should always be compared with the company’s domain name strategy. Are domain name registrations in place to support the marketing of the brand in all relevant territories? Are defensive registrations in place to ensure that others aren’t using your brand for their own gain? Knowing what you own is key to building a successful IP strategy; one that will allow you to exploit maximum value from your company’s creativity, while ensuring you can chart your future in the marketplace without fear of infringing or being infringed. WHICH IP RIGHTS APPLY? Intellectual property laws are designed to protect different forms of subject matter, although in some cases there is a degree of overlap. Legislation often varies by jurisdiction, but it always shares in common the intention of providing the ‘owner’ of the exclusive rights with a monopoly on the copying or distribution of a protected form of the ‘property’. Some rights exist automatically, but most need to be registered and, where appropriate, renewed. Patents: a patent may be granted for a new, useful, and non-obvious invention, and gives the patent holder an exclusive right to commercially exploit the invention for a certain period of time (typically 20 years from the filing date of a patent application, dependent on the jurisdiction). Trademarks: a trademark is a distinctive sign used to distinguish the products or services of different businesses. Trademarks can be registered to protect a product’s brand identity (its name, logo, slogan and, increasingly, shape, colour and sound, where distinctive). Protection generally lasts for 10 years, but can be renewed for additional periods of 10 years. Domain names: such registrations identify a company or its products and services on the Internet. Names can be registered as generic top-level domains (gTLDs e.g. .com) or by country (ccTLDs, e.g. .co.uk in the UK). Industrial designs: this right protects the form of appearance, style or design of an industrial object (for example, spare parts, furniture, or textiles). Copyrights: copyright automatically subsists in creative and artistic works, giving the copyright holder the exclusive right to control reproduction or adaptation of such works for a certain period of time. Trade secrets: These are secret, non-public information concerning the commercial practices or proprietary knowledge of a business. They are, or should be, protected by confidentiality agreements. 5
  • 6. Just like any other property, the value of IP is flexible: it all depends on whether the company is buying or selling it; what it is being securitised for; whether the valuation is subject to accounting standards or financial reporting conventions; whether the right’s validity has been tested following a contested court action or is only presumptively valid; and whether it is free from encumbrances or subject to licenses, charges or other equities. ‘The context of the valuation is critical,’ explains Danny Ryan from LECG Corporation. ‘For example, patents can be worthless if they don’t come with the necessary know- how or trade secrets to apply them. At present, there is no standard method, but as CEOs and financial institutions begin to understand more about IP valuation, it will result in an increased belief in balance sheet values of IP as a result.’(Source: presentation at IP Review Live in February 2006.) Until that point, those IP valuation experts who practise their profession agree on one thing: given the different reasons why IP Rights get valued and the different methods of valuing them, companies should consider carefully what purpose a valuation exercise is intended to achieve before embarking on it. Bearing this in mind, CEOs should adopt a mindset of sensible constructive scepticism when dealing with any value-related issue and should not allow themselves to be seduced into accepting a single sum as representing the ‘true’ value of any item of IP. This is not to say that a directional understanding of IP’s value contribution to a product cannot already be estimated. The valuation of IP has become a necessary business skill, particularly in mergers and acquisitions where management may be required to determine how much of the purchase price should be attributable to intangible assets. Management should start by first asking whether the overall product is value producing, followed by an assessment of IP’s contribution to that value. General areas of examination include: • Determining the product’s competitive position. That is, is the product advantaged and economically profitable (value creating)? • If the product is advantaged, identifying the source of the advantage from either a differentiation and/or relative cost perspective. • Identifying the specific product features and services contributing to the product’s source of advantage. • Linking IP, if any, to those product features and services. • Assessing the degree to which IP has contributed to the specific product features and services providing the differentiation and cost advantage. As IP becomes an integral part of business strategy, its value should be understood before it is granted, not just when it is bought or sold. Companies need to understand the link between IP and market share if they are to retain their competitive advantage, as one US science and technology giant discovered when it decided to cut back on its R&D spending as part of a larger company-wide series of cuts in 2003. Unsurprisingly, the reduction in R&D investment also led to a decline in the number of patent disclosures, applications and grants. Concerned that the short term cost savings in R&D and IP were coming at the expense of long term value, a project team was established to try and measure the value of its R&D. What they actually did was measure the value of its IP. The balance sheet showed that the company was investing approximately 4% of its sales in R&D, in excess of $500 million annually. The project team assumed that the value of R&D could be partly measured by the value of the IP that it produced. In its case, IP generated income in two main areas: licensing (a revenue that would be lost without IP protection) and the profit from higher margins charged for IP-protected products. They found that licensing revenue accounted for about £100 million (or 20%) of annual R&D spending. They also found that a significant share of the R&D investment was earned back through the higher margins earned on the IP-protected products. This was calculated by linking the company’s current patent rights with the company’s financial database, allowing for the measurement of margins for IP-protected versus non-IP protected products. In fact, on average, IP-protected margins were 8% higher than their non-protected counterparts. This helped to reinforce the importance of IP (and R&D spending) in the company. However, it didn’t serve as a push to increase R&D spending; rather it prompted them to analyse how to get more from the R&D investment that was 6 HOW VALUABLE IS MY IP?
  • 7. already being made through IP registrations. As a result, extra investment was dedicated to building the company’s team of patent attorneys and the company’s business unit managers were asked to incorporate the potential advantages of IP into their strategic planning. After all, if IP conveys a competitive advantage, companies should be asking whether they are getting the most from that advantage in terms of price and/or revenue growth. Using IP to attract investment The cost of developing new brands, innovative designs and schemes for marketing or distributing them is greater than most small and medium-sized businesses can bear by themselves, so they have to borrow venture capital or development cash from a bank; however, that bank wants to know whether it will ever see that money again. Carefully managed IP can help a company to justify that investment. For example, Cambridge Display Technology (CDT) was able to generate funds through financial underwriting from Lloyds TSB Bank in 2004. ‘Validation of technology was key to assessing patent worth, quantifying value in the process,’ said Michael Black, Vice President of CDT. (Source: presentation at IP Review Live in February 2006.) Similarly, well-managed IP can help a company to generate investment from venture capitalist (VC) and private equity (PE) companies. IP is now a valuable commodity and many VC and PE companies are beginning to recognise the potential returns on investment that this new asset can generate. As with the initial investment in product developments, IP Rights provide no guarantee that their owners will make money, but they do provide some comfort to the lender that he may one day see his money again. IP-savvy companies can also use their IP portfolio to negotiate themselves into a stronger position in cases of M&A opportunities; a tidy IP portfolio ensures more return in cases of sale, whereas the acquiring party needs to be on the ball if it is to ensure that the IP it is buying is in order. Can IP protection reduce commercial risk? Every statutory IP Right can blow up in your face, if it turns out to have been invalidly registered. This frequently occurs for patents, but also for trademarks and designs. That’s why it’s so important to properly protect a company’s creativity in the first place. But for as long as you have those IP Rights, you still have some comfort based on its deterrent effect and the cost faced by your competitors in attacking it. Even an invalid patent can ward off competitors for as long as it takes to invalidate it. For example, Viagra is one of the most successful products of our generation. Pfizer’s patent was eventually held invalid in the UK, but not before the company had built up a massive market presence based on its powerful trademark. But IP can only be protected commercially if it is properly monitored. In the field of brands, for example, counterfeiting provides a real and growing threat to trademark registrations. According to some, counterfeit goods account for 7-9% of world trade and rising (Toe Su Aung, General Counsel at Batmark Ltd and chair of the International Trademark Association’s Anti- counterfeiting & Enforcement Committee. Source: IP Review, issue 15, summer 2006). No branded goods are safe, nor any country immune, but at present it is up to the individual company to monitor protection of its own brands. Counterfeiting erodes brand values and product integrity and damages a company’s market share for genuine brands. They can also cause injury and defraud both governments and the general public. ‘Companies need to be vigilant in defending the integrity of their trademarks and urge regulators to enforce IP protection laws vigorously,’ advises Toe Su Aung. A market-aware CEO will not determine his business strategy first, later considering what IP Rights are at his 7
  • 8. disposal. Nor will he contemplate his IP Rights before deciding how he can blend them into a business strategy. Successful companies are aligning IP and business strategy to use their IP Rights to maximise their market presence. For example, when Nokia decided to enter the US telecoms market, an immediate problem was that the players already there, Motorola and the Japanese tele-giants, were well entrenched. Those players had cross-licensed the use of one another’s patents and Nokia was afraid to infringe. Those patents were so many in number, and so complex, that even the act of reading them to see what they covered would have been a slow, uncertain and extremely expensive activity. By the time Nokia discovered whether it infringed them, most of them would have lapsed or become obsolete, to be replaced by new ones. So Nokia developed its own portfolio of patents. It was then able to say: ‘Here are our patents. You may or may not be infringing them, but if you let us into the club we’ll cross-license to you, too.’ In doing this, Nokia gained admittance to their target market. IBM’s long-term business strategy reflects a different approach to patent protection. When Big Blue made boxes, it wanted computer users to be able to get hold of as much software as possible. That’s why, when the debate over software patents arose in the 1960s and 1970s, IBM fought long, hard and unsuccessfully to ensure that computer software was as unprotected as possible. Later, IBM’s own huge segment of the hardware made it so powerful a monopolist that it couldn’t enforce its IP Rights against cheap PC clone-makers without risking antitrust suits. Recognising the potential power of software patents against the weakness of machine patents, the company switched to software development and is currently the most profitable software developer in the world. It has since altered its approach again; announcing at the end of 2006, a new patent policy to promote innovation. ‘We are now the biggest supporters of the open source development project,’ explains David Kappos, IBM’s Vice President and assistant general counsel for IP law. ‘Admittedly, this policy is not easily reconcilable with our traditional IP strategy, but we are convinced that it is the way to go for the future.’ Microsoft, in turn, is pushing for amendments to international systems to better reflect the rising demands for patents. Part of this is to help technology-rich companies, such as its own, better use patent registrations as a means of capturing value, but it also wants to open up the procedure to companies who have, to date, been unable to utilise the patent system due to its prohibitive cost. Using IP knowledge to beat the competition IP is not only a legal and protective mechanism – by looking at other people’s IP you can determine where you need to invest money in R&D. IP profiling can give a CEO not only the low-down on their own patents, but also on those of their competitors, distributors, suppliers and takeover targets. Patent analysis uses the information provided by the registrars of statutory patent rights, as well as information that appears on the face of patent applications, to measure activity in the marketplace. However, unless you’re an experienced patent examiner or analyst, it can be difficult to decipher the results. Fortunately, services already exist to assess the available information on your behalf. The information available from these services isn’t dull nor difficult to utilise. It includes such valuable information as: the names of inventors on your competitors’ patent applications; the fields in which your competitors are spending money trying to develop products and services; the split of research activity between different product sectors; and even data concerning professional representatives. Similarly, if you track which trademarks other companies are registering, you’ll be able to assess if they’re moving into new markets, potentially threatening your business model. In the domain names arena, conducting a WHOis and reverse WHOis investigation will also enable to you to check which URLs are available and what others have done before you to launch a campaign in your key territories. Once a CEO understands the basics of IP, they can start to ask the following questions to make 8 IP FOR BUSINESS STRATEGY
  • 9. WHAT IS PATENT ANALYTICS? Consultative patent analysis services provide fast and easy access to competitive information through statistical analysis of registered patents (by jurisdiction, geographical area and/or market segment). Often, the findings will help a company to better align its corporate IP strategy and plan its future in the marketplace; however, patent analytics isn’t just about quantifying the IP that a company owns or the activity of its competitors, the results can also provide a boost to a company’s bottom line by highlighting opportunities for IP licensing, partnering and litigation that might otherwise have remained unearthed. The potential return on investment is huge; IBM Corporation, for example, brought in nearly $1 billion in business through licensing and IP collaborations in 2005. But, as well as assessing whole industries from a patent analytics perspective, patent analysis can also assess activity by country, particularly in emerging markets. By assessing the most popular classes for both foreign and national filings, patent analytics reports are able to highlight future trends in the country and industry sector. Likewise, studying patent habits from a geographical perspective enables companies to assess territories on the basis of innovation, highlighting the technology hotbeds for various industries – valuable information for businesses planning expansion. 9 CONCLUSION As all CEOs should now be aware, ours is no longer a culture of bricks and mortar assets; we are operating in a knowledge-based economy in which the ownership and management of intangible assets, such as IP, is directly linked to corporate success and failure. In such an environment, protecting, developing and exploiting IP assets should be at the very forefront of business strategy; however, for many companies, this is not yet the case. Ultimately, the growth in value of IP necessitates a step change in the manner in which companies and, by extension CEOs, view and utilise the IP assets that they own. Properly managed, IP can be a source of innovation, creativity and corporate growth. But to succeed, it needs to be understood at boardroom level. Trademarks, patents, domain names, design rights and other forms of IP interlink with every aspect of a business – from the way in which it markets its products and services to the way its assets are reported financially. Companies need to recognise this importance if they are to maximise the benefits to all sides of the business, and to ensure that any move into a new market or business area is supported by the requisite IP. But this needn’t be as complicated as it first sounds. Once a CEO recognises the value of its corporate IP, there are some important questions they need to ask their IP department. These are summarised on the next two pages.
  • 10. IP work for them: (1) Can we profit from our IP? ‘Twenty-five years ago, IP was simply registered as a defensive tool,’ said Bruce Berman of Brody Associates. ‘Today we know it as an asset that can be exploited for financial return.’ This is certainly true when it comes to selling or licensing unwanted IP, which may be very good in itself, but not related to any goods or services the business is trading in. IP Rights can also be mortgaged or securitised, but individual industrial rights are likely to be highly valued if they are not secured as part of the business as a going concern. An exception here is copyright, where ‘Bowie bonds’ give the IP owner the chance to borrow a large sum, repayable through relatively stable and predictable royalty income over a long period of time. Further reading: ‘Closing the innovation value gap’, Jeff Maddox, IAM (January 2006) (2) How much is it worth? The answer depends on the reason for asking the question. A wise CEO will hold his company’s IP in high esteem privately, but remain cautious about putting a high figure to its value in public. That way he won’t encourage inflated expectations among shareholders, speculators or employees. ‘Value your IP as any other asset,’ advises CPA’s Jeff Maddox. But remember, it’s difficult to value IP, so seek expert advice in order to tailor the valuation to the IP Rights in question; for example, as they can be renewed, trademark and domain names are valued in a completely different way to a company’s fixed-term patent rights. Further reading: ‘A capital market approach to IP valuation’, Jeff Maddox, IAM (June 2005); ‘What your domain name is really worth’, Dominic Speller, MIP (June 2006); ‘How to value your IP’, Robert Wulff, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/ip-strategy (3) Can we make money out of IP licensing? You can if you create products that lots of people want to pay for. Where there is no demand, there’s no big money. That’s why companies spend so much time marketing their brands. Look how Intel, by advertising direct to the public, were able then to charge manufacturers for using their ‘Intel inside’ brand. ‘Non-core licensing is like playing the lottery,’ explains Peter Spours, formerly Vice President at Thinkfire and now head of IP at TomTom. ‘Winners are the rare exception. For the best chance of success, companies need to align their corporate and IP strategies, focusing on the lucrative rights they own.’ You need to understand your assets, quantify them as strategic business aims and understand your market to generate revenue through licensing. Beware of the ‘illusion of exclusion’; licensing valuable technologies brings greater profit than keeping them to yourself.’ Further reading: ‘How to exploit patents for profit’, Peter Spours, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/patents (4) What is the tax position of our IP? In a word, complex. Transfer pricing rules and withholding tax can affect transactions between companies in the same group when, for example, a tax-efficient IP holding company in the Netherlands Antilles licenses the use of ‘its’ IP to companies elsewhere in the world. On the plus side, IP development costs can reduce the tax bill. ‘Careful tax consideration throughout the life cycle is key,’ says Isabel Verlinden from PriceWaterhouseCoopers. ‘R&D, corporate partnering and licensing all have an impact on the tax status of IP, yet many companies only consider their tax position as an afterthought, which can often be a costly mistake. Rules and responsibilities must be defined in agreements with third parties.’ Keep your accountants informed and watch for major shifts in direction. Only by properly recording and auditing the value of your IP will you be able to assess your tax position. Further reading: ‘A Haven for Tax?’, Isabel Verlinden, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/ip-strategy (5) What is the most efficient way of managing our IP? Obtaining, enforcing and exploiting IP is not a party trick – it’s a skill that is acquired through patient study, professional qualification and on-the-job training. Some businesses outsource all their IP work and it looks a lot cheaper. For many businesses this may be the best course, particularly those that are not IP-intensive (the retail clothing sector, for example). However, businesses can usually find something useful for their IP department to do if the IP work doesn’t fully occupy them, while some companies that outsource their IP work find that they fail 10 10 QUESTIONS EVERY CEO SHOULD ASK
  • 11. 11 to budget for unexpected contingencies, such as having to defend an expensively acquired patent. Ultimately, the IP department needs to raise its profile in the company, by showing its value in terms of revenue and by explaining the importance of IP to the business as a whole. Further reading: ‘A recipe for success’, Paula Nelson, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/interviews (6) Are we doing enough to combat IP crime? IP crime should nnot be ignored since it generates illicit income that cannot be easily laundered and is thus best ‘invested’ in further IP crimes. Information sharing with competitors and co-operation with the enforcement authorities are both strongly recommended, though they will always be disruptive and often initially futile. Bring private prosecutions if the authorities are unwilling or under-resourced: even a token sentence following a conviction will pave the way for the recovery of the proceedings of crime. Further reading: ‘Does crime pay?’, Toe Su Aung, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/ip-strategy (7) Is IP litigation the only option? No. Arbitration is often favoured as a means of getting a binding decision where two sides fall out, while mediation has become increasingly popular as a means of enabling the warring factions to talk their problems through and reach their own decision. In short, arbitration is good at dealing with problems attached to the past (‘did we act outside the scope of our IP license?’), while mediation is good for disputes that reach into the future (‘this license isn’t working and makes no business sense, so how can we patch it up?’). Further reading: ‘A strategy for enforcement’, Samantha Frida, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/domains (8) Should we have IP insurance? If you are in a sector in which your competitors neither sue nor are sued, or if you are so large and wealthy that you can absorb any amount of IP litigation expense without noticing it, IP insurance is not for you. If your business is very small, you probably can’t afford its fairly steep premiums (which are tailored to the risks borne by the underwriters). If you’re somewhere between the two, you may well want to consider it seriously. Case-studies have illuminated both the virtues of IP insurance and its shortcomings – for both companies and attorney firms. The best advice is not to let your mind be made up once and for all – revisit the issue regularly, on the basis of what your business needs at any given point in its trading cycle. Further reading: ‘Made in Canada’, Rob Macdonald, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/software; ‘Going Global’, Margaret Briffa, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/ip-strategy (9) How can we monitor our competitors’ IP? Statutory IP Rights create a trail of both electronic and paper information that you can use. Warning note: much ‘current’ information is out of date. A patent filed by a competitor today will often tell you what it was spending its R&D cash on three or four years ago, but not yesterday. However, in many industries it can take years to get a product to market. Assessing patent filings in such instances provides an indicator of activity. It can also help you to assess your business model in comparison to industry trends. Further reading: ‘Reveal your competitive advantage’, Jason Resnick, IAM (January 2006); ‘The secret of our success’, ‘Unlock your IP’, Jason Resnick, IAM (CHECK); Marc Kaufman, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/patents (10) I understand IP, but what is IA and IC? The honest answer is that they’re all the same thing, viewed from different angles. IP addresses the fact that intellectual property behaves like property: you can buy it, rent it, exclude other people from it. IA (intellectual asset) focuses on the fact that it’s an asset rather than merely a liability: it can create value through strategic deployment, through growing a thicket of IP Rights that competitors cannot penetrate or (in the case of so-called ‘patent trolls’) by laying down IP Rights that earn rent from passers-by who chance upon them. IC (intellectual capital) describes the ability of IP to influence the capital value of its owner and to act as a mechanism that triggers the release of capital when it is securitised. ‘There is value to be derived from non-IP intangibles, or “I-Stuff”’, says Suzanne Harrison. ‘Only a small percentage of “I-Stuff” can be protected, but quantifying it can help companies better understand the value of their assets and extract financial return from them as a result.’ Further reading: Edison in the Boardroom, Suzanne Harrison (2004); ‘Backing the ideas generation’, Dr Caroline Sincock, IP Review/www.ipreview.com/interviews
  • 12. Established in 1969, by attorneys and with over 38 years of legal experience and 40,000 clients, CPA is a leading legal services provider. Our services are designed to enable clients to increase capacity, manage risk, and reduce costs – without compromising quality. CPA is a multi-shore company with offices in 7 countries and a network of associates in every Intellectual Property jurisdiction. For further information about CPA visit www.cpaglobal.com CPA HEAD OFFICE: CPA House, 11-15 Seaton Place, St Helier, Jersey JE1 1BL, Channel Islands Tel +44 (0) 1534 888711 Fax +44 (0) 1534 888747 www.cpaglobal.com REGIONAL OFFICES: UK: Tel +44 (0) 1784 224 559 Germany: Tel +49 (0) 89 4567850 USA: Tel +1 (703) 739 2234 Australia: Tel +61 (0) 2 9993 3010 TMDS: Tel +44 (0) 20 7549 0660 CPA SOFTWARE SOLUTIONS: UK: Tel +44 (0) 20 7549 0666 France: Tel +33 (0) 1 30 15 66 66 Germany: Tel +49 (0) 89 4567850 USA: Tel +1 (703) 739 2234 Canada: Tel +1 (613) 233 0519 Australia: Tel +61 (0) 2 9993 3000 ABOUT CPA 12