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COMMERCIALIZING INNOVATION

COMMERCIALIZING INNOVATION. The Role Of IP, A Perspective From South of the Border. Presented by A. James Isbester. March 20, 2009. The Silicon Valley Dream. Big Inc. won’t pursue great new technology so individuals Big Inc. and form Start Up Corp to do so

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COMMERCIALIZING INNOVATION

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  1. COMMERCIALIZING INNOVATION The Role Of IP, A Perspective From South of the Border Presented by A. James Isbester March 20, 2009

  2. The Silicon Valley Dream • Big Inc. won’t pursue great new technology so individuals Big Inc. and form Start Up Corp to do so • Seed money rents a garage and buys some machines • Venture Rounds A, B, C get product to market • Sales start to take off • Start Up Corp goes public • Start Up Corp renamed Even Larger Corp, gets risk averse, won’t pursue next new technology • Cycle repeats

  3. Dominant Trends In Start-Up Financing • Money is getting more expensive • “Mezzanine” money more readily available than seed money • Investors/venture capitalists are looking for five year exit strategy • IPO’s were increasingly rare in 2008, pre-crisis • Acquisitions increasingly common as an investor exit strategy

  4. Interesting Cross-Industry Trend • As between “Innovation” and “Development,” development taking more $, more time • Semiconductors – qualifying, interoperability, standards adoption, customer acceptance • Life sciences – clinicals and regulatory approvals, adoption as standard of care • Telecom – standards adoption, provider purchasing cycles, infrastructure implementation

  5. Industry Examples • Semiconductor typical time to market • 1970 – three years including fabrication • 2005 – seven years, assuming an available foundry • Medical device FDA approval time • 1987 – six months • 2007 – three years • Pharmaceutical PMA cost • 1985 - • 2008 - $100 million?

  6. The Dominant Trends In Recent US Patent Law • Patentees losing their advantage in the courts • Injunctions • Venue issues • Declaratory relief jurisdiction • Patentees losing their advantage in the Patent Office • Patentable subject matter • Renewed vigour to obviousness • Inter partes reexamination • Bottom line – an innovator’s patents are now subject to greater scrutiny than ever before

  7. Legislative Reforms • Maybe this year? • Reduced damages • Procedural impositions upon patent owner • Tilt playing field even further against patentee

  8. Lessons To Be Drawn • As innovation is comparatively less expensive, time consuming, patent protection becomes more important • Hard to innovate faster than competitor • As pendulum continues to swing against patentees, • Emphasis on quality rather than quantity • Audience is changing • Corporate purchaser not public markets • Patent Office examiners rather than juries • Plan where to innovate • Blocking patents possible • Elbow room available • Competitors’ patents are not preclusive

  9. An Uncomfortable Thought • Innovation requires • Motivation • Opportunity • Ability • Motivation: • customer contact • reward • Opportunity comes from engineering involvement • Design • Manufacturing • Ability comes from training • What happens in an economy in which • a) fewer kids take hard sciences/engineering • b) those who do are better off becoming lawyers • c) design and manufacturing are done “somewhere else”

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