Intellectual Property Management

 

What is IPM | Why IPM | IPM under CICM | Main Goals | Requirements | How-to of IPM

What is Intellectual Property Management

Intellectual property management is the management of patents, brands, copyrights and trade secrets that are the basis of the competitive advantage of a certain business unit and the organization as a whole. It involves the recognition of such intellectual property (IP) rights that are of competitive and commercial value to the business unit and its adequate exploitation.

Why IPM

Patents (technological inventions and business methods), trademarks (brands, slogans and trade dress), copyrights (software, literary and artistic works) and trade secrets (any commercially valuable proprietary information) have proven to be very valuable business assets. The knowledge economy has witnessed a proliferation in the number of IP rights that major organizations may have – tens of thousands of patents, tens of hundreds of brands, extensive libraries of brands and billions of dollars worth of trade secrets. Even smaller organizations have found that the IP they hold is one of the main determinates of their competitive power, market position and future prospects. IP also has a great potential not only as a competitive weapon that creates entry barriers for the competition, but also as a commercial tool used for revenue generation. The latter use is enabled by the nature of IP itself where it is seen as a bundle of rights that can be licensed in full or in part, in lieu of the product it originally supported or independently creating a multitude of investment opportunities. A business that misses on managing IP as competitive and commercial tools is set to jeopardize its competitive position and undercapitalize its most valuable assets.

IPM Under the CICM Approach

The goal of the IPM stage under the CICM model is to maximize the value created and extracted at the previous stages by using the legally defined protected intellectual capital, i.e. IP , for two main purposes: securing strong competitive positions and generating revenues. This entails realizing the potential of IP both as a competitive weapon and a business asset. For this to happen, IPM should infiltrate all levels of the organization, and hence be reflected in the management objectives of the organization and individual business units. The main distinction that CICM draws when it comes to IPM is that a business should distinguish between two types of IP the primary and secondary forms. The primary form is that type of IP which is at the basis of competition in a certain industry e.g. patents in the chemical industry, brands/trademarks in the consumer products industry, and copyrights in the entertainment industry. Trade secrets providing a blanket protection for information is relevant to all industry and is defined as an ancillary IP to all the other primary forms. Secondary forms of IP are those that the business unit own and can use in support of their primary form to reinforce a particular competitive position related to a specific product or technology – e.g. brands for chemical business to business company.


Main Goals of IPM

To effectively capitalize and manage the primary form of IP that a business unit and the organization as a whole owns, management should consider the following in defining its objectives:

1. Know and assess the IP wealth of the organization and assess its current and potential uses, particularly in relation to the primary form of IP.

2. Build a strong IP portfolio by combining weak with strong IP, reinforce strong IP through acquiring additional supporting same or different forms of IP, and abandon low performing IPs.

3. Adopt IP strategies that enable the use of IP as a competitive weapon (lawfully) to hamper competition’s efforts in securing a strong competitive position for short and medium term purposes.

4. Adopt IP strategies to sustain and create new competitive advantage in the long term.

5. Adopt IP strategies for the commercialization of IP as a business asset to expand both geographically, and to enter related/analogous new markets through licensing.

6. Take IPM to the operational level by effecting the necessary changes to the structure of the organization, and allocating responsibility to IP teams and units. This would enable every business unit to devise detailed investment plans for leveraging the IP portfolio.

7. Infiltrate in the culture of the organization awareness about the proper use of IP through establishing sound management practices both to preserve the value of IP and guard against risks related to infringing the IP of others.

8. Provide tools and systems to enable IPM at the operational levels. In particular design tools for the valuation and assessment of IP.

Main Requirements

Having a working knowledge of IP (by business managers, accountants, and other personnel entrusted with business asset management) is essential for strategic business management and for maximum value extraction from the most valuable business assets. To effectively manage IP management needs to:

1. First and foremost have a shift in seeing IP not as legal instruments but as business assets capable of being used for competitive and commercialization purposes.

2. Realize that protection of knowledge assets through the acquisition of IP rights is an essential step in protecting the business asset base of the enterprise, which amounts in some businesses to 80%. Failing to understand and thus acquire IP to protect an organization’s knowledge assets may seriously jeopardize the competitive advantage of a business unit. A working knowledge of IP is instrumental for a business unit preservation and enhancement of its competitive power.

3. Appreciate the risks associated with managing IP related to infringement of the business strategic IP assets. Failure to effectively protect IP may result in extensive losses particularly at a time where misappropriation of trade secrets, pirating copyrighted works on the Internet and otherwise, producing counterfeit products, and infringing patents are on the increase. Devising protection plans to deter violation of the organization’s rights is essential. Akin to that is implementing a clearance procedure that serves to instill a culture that prevents the IP of others as well which may make the organization liable for millions of dollars in damage awards.

4. To incorporate understanding of the primary form of IP in the design of the intellectual capital management model since intellectual property management is the final stage where the value derived from the business intellectual capital is maximized.

How-to of IPM

Achieving the objectives of intellectual property management involves undertaking a number of steps including the following:

A. IP Audit – Unlike a legal audit, and IP audit for business purposes focuses on the primary form of IP and not every form of IP that the organization owns. The main purpose of the audit is to recognize the actual and potential future value of the IP and the actual and potential use of it by the various business units. This will later inform the strategic planning phase where the primary form of IP are placed in groups to be used for competitive purposes, commercial purposes or to be abandoned.

B. IP Portfolio – Following the IP audit the audit team should create an IP portfolio for the whole organization providing a snapshot of the organization’s IP base as well as its relation to the various business units’ competitive advantage and future plans. This is then divided into various sections that are handed to the various business units for proper exploitation. IP strategies should be forged to strengthen the IP portfolio by reinforcing the strong IP with added protection (improvement patents, sub-brands, or derivative copyrights for example), by combining weak IP with stronger ones, and by abandoning least performing IP for cost reduction or donating it for tax deductions.

C. Strategy and Synergy Teams – The effective management of IP requires two main functions that can be carried by various teams, departments or units. The first is a strategy function based at the business unit level where management forges the appropriate IP strategies and marries them with the overall business strategy, and devises plans for taking such strategies to the operational level. The second function relates to leveraging IP across the whole organization and outside by a cross functional team. That team aims at creating synergy in the use of a particular group of the IP portfolio internally across the various departments and business units, and externally with customers and other partners.

D. Valuation and Assessment Tools – The expert valuation of individual IP is essential particularly in cases of litigation, major licensing transactions or joint ventures, and mergers and acquisitions. But such valuation is very costly and thus is not suitable for management purposes. That is where qualitative and quantitative valuation and assessment tools become essential for the effective management of IP. Assessment tools are mainly qualitative and deal with the strength and scope of the IP right, while valuation tools are quantitative and aim at assessing the actual or potential value of an IP right through looking at sale revenues, royalties, and growth rates of the business units.


How to build an intellectual property management system is explained step-by-step in the book: Comprehensive Intellectual Capital Management

 

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