Planning and Preparation for Effective Negotiation
In negotiating a license agreement, it is essential to establish the terms that reflect the allocation of risks between the parties and the potential marketability of the patented technology.
Finally, licensors may seek supplemental
remuneration or other types of income.
Royalty payments may be reduced or obviated
under a variety of circumstances where the
licensee can compensate the licensor for the
use of the technology in other ways
The size of the fee largely depends
on the developmental stage of the
invention or the exclusivity of the
license as discussed above
A common method for calculating royalties is the 25 % rule. This
rule starts with the premise that, under model circumstances,
the licensor is owed 25 % of the licensee’s net invoiced sales
The purpose of annual or other periodic fees, which typically
terminate when royalty payments begin, is to incentivize the
licensee to aggressively develop and market the technology
Licensees, on the other hand, benefit more from low upfront payments, leaving the licensor to be compensated by royalties
it is always beneficial for the licensor “to seek substantial
upfront payments rather than higher royalties, especially
for untried products and/or markets
a typical license will include a signing fee, reimbursement and ongoing payment of patent
prosecution costs, milestone payments, minimum annual royalties and a percentage royalty on sales
Payment terms. there are several
forms of payment that licensing
parties can negotiate to compensate the licensor for the patented technology.
the licensor can grant a broad
field of use with the right to
retract fields if the licensor
presents a use to the licensee and
the licensee elects not to pursue it
the licensor can grant a narrow field of use, with the licensee having the right of first refusal for other uses that the licensor would like to propose to third parties
Potential compromise positions
include the following
Exclusivity and field of
use. License exclusivity
refers to whether the
licensor has licensed the
invention/technology to
multiple, licensees,
whereas the field of use
is the circumstances for
which the licensor has
granted the licensee
permission to make, use
and sell the patented
technology.
Developmental stage of invention:Patented inventions that are in the early stage of evelopment often require substantial investment and development before a commercially viable product is produced.
Rights to
improvements.
Parties should
negotiate
provisions to address
the
ownership of any current or
future
improvements of the
technology
Proprietary position:A weak proprietary
interest may exist where a patent is
questionable in nature. Such a patent does not offer significant market strength because it is either incapable of keeping products or services using similar technology off the market or potentially could be invalidated
The income method values
technology by the total estimated annual returns,
which reflects the bottom line
of what the licensee can pay
Using the market method, the value is determined by evaluating the value assigned to comparable technology licensed recently, which requires determining what transactions are comparable and obtaining current, reliable data
The value of the technology using the cost method is the cost of developing or purchasing the technology, though this does not reflect changes in the market or new information about the technology
Valuation approaches. A
business school/MBA approach
to valuation often uses one of
three methods:
the negotiation brings together the terms of the license
agreement which reflect the allocation of risk between the parties of possible future development and the marketeability of the patented technololy
The
negotiation
The groundwork
for open dialog: In any
negotiation, a
nondisclosure
agreement can provide security for both parties
to maximize
information
transfer.
Drafting the contract:
Commentators have suggested
that the party drafting the
contract is always in the more favorable position because that
party will be in a position to
ensure inclusion of desirable
provisions and places the other party in the position of
defending every request to modify the drafted agreement
Deadlines:It is important because it forces the other party to reveal
their true intentions and interests in the license agreement. The
main steps in the negotiation process for which pre-established
deadlines can be established include: the initial meeting, the
drafting of the letter of understanding, the execution of the letter
of understanding, the meeting to review the draft agreement, the
revisions of the draft of the agreement, finalize the license
agreement and execute the license agreement
Preparing to negotiate
The Term Sheet: exchange a sheet of terms before the initial negotiation meeting. cover the main problems in a possible agreement in the form of a summary, which includes: the licensed product or process; licensed territory; license rights and royalties; technical information and training required to develop and manufacture, sell and service the licensed product, and who will be responsible for it; sales and service support; degree of exclusivity and duration of the license
The agreement team must dentify, evaluate and prioritize the interests of their client. The interests of the clients will be tangible and intangible
Initial Team Meeting: reach an understanding of the commercial motivation of the agreement as well as responsibilities and the role of each team member during the process.
Business Development
Executive; a Scientific/
Technical Expert; a
Decision Maker; and a Licensing Attorney.
A key to any deal is for each party to have an understanding of what they want from the dea