カテゴリー 全て - market - business - design - intellectual

によって Andrew Carmichael 15年前.

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Journey of an invention - Jonny version

When you come up with an idea for an invention, determining its market potential is crucial. Understanding if there is a demand for your product can save time and resources. The British Library offers an e-course that can guide you through this process.

Journey of an invention - Jonny version

Journey of an invention

4) What is your business model ?

How do you write a business plan (and why is that so important?
What are some examples of returns that inventors have recived in return for their ideas?
What are the different ways that inventors have achived a financial return on from thier invention?

5) Who and what do you need, (partners, funding, manufactures etc.) to make it happen ?

Is there any funding available, and how do I find it?
How do you find a manufacturer and?
Few people can do everything, what should you team be comprised of?

3) Can it be made?

How do you get an idea of what it will cost to make?
How can design make your invention fly off the shelves?
How do you get a prototype made, and why is that so important?

2) Is there a market for your idea?

How do you present your findings in such a way that it will interest investors (and why is this important - read the note)?

You have all seen the part on Dragons Den where the investor asks the inventor how big the market for their invention is and the inventor says that the world market for brooms (for example) is ### squillion and he hopes to capture 1% of that market which would be # squillion and therefore his company is worth ##### squillion £ - and they cannot understand why they get laughed at!

If only the world were so simple

How do you go about finding out if there is a market for your idea?
Th Brititsh Library do a neat ecourse on the subject
If no one will want to buy it what is the point of developing it?

6) First launch checklist

Are you maximising the value of free PR and marketing opportunities?
Are all of the contractual agrangements in place and are they watertight?

7) Taking care of business

How do you come up with the next idea?
How do you deal with infringemets?
How do you monitor licences and the use of your intelectual property?

1) You have an idea, what are the first questions about protecting intellectual property that you need to ask ?

Additional help is available - click here

This will take you to a separate map that lists more resouces available that will help you with this quaetions

How do you work wih IP professionals?

There are a great many skilled, qualified and decent intellectual property professionals, >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> BUT - there are a pernicious breed of service providers who ..........

What are the stages of protecting your IP?
Intellectual Property Office - Patents
Is your idea original - and how do you search for information ?

This has to be the first question to ask, if someone else has had the idea before and it is in the public domain, even if they have not protected it, produced it or marketed it, then you will never be able to protect your idea so you will never be able to recoup any investment in money or time that you make.

Its not always a signal to give up, many people use the discovery that an idea has been thought of before as a stimulus to innovate futher.

But you should at least conduct your own searches before you proceed. The two standard ways to start are;

1) Search the catalogues of exisiting manufactures

2) Search one of the online patent indexes

3) Search the internet

Record what you have found and record anything that is near or in the same classification.

esp@cenet Home page
Google Patents
What is Intelectual Property (IP) and can your idea be protected ?

Basically if you cannot protect your intellectual property (IP) that embodies your idea then there is not much point in pursuing it. It will never have any commercial value as IP - that is not to say that you should not develop it or market it but you will never be able to stop anyone else using your idea and competing with you. There are many successful business that have capitalised on a so called "First-mover advantage" situation, see wiki link. But that route requires a different business strategy and it is unlikely to ever create the sort of long term financial value that a properly protected idea can.

Secondly there is not always a black and white definitive answer to this question, a clever IP lawyer can often find an aspect of an idea that can be protected that the layman would not have thought of - but you need to do your own assessment first.

Intellectual property - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What is IP ? - this is a good article