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OverviewAll you need to protect and profit from your invention You've got a great idea and you're ready to strike it rich. Now, you need to find a company or partner you can trust, hash out a fair licensing deal, and get your idea to the marketplace. Profit From Your Idea will help you negotiate and draft a licensing agreement that protects your interests and maximizes your chances of earning a profit. With this all-in-one guide you'll understand how to: - navigate the licensing landscape - protect your intellectual property rights - sort out ownership rights - work with licensing agents - protect confidential information - find and pitch to potential licensees - license overseas - disclose your invention safely, and - negotiate a winning license agreement. The 11th edition covers the latest developments in licensing law and patent filing rules, and discusses new tools to help you research the market for your invention and identify potential licensees. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Richard StimPublisher: NOLO Imprint: NOLO Edition: 11th ed. Dimensions: Width: 17.50cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.60cm Weight: 0.680kg ISBN: 9781413331196ISBN 10: 141333119 Pages: 448 Publication Date: 28 November 2023 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsGives detailed instructions on working with manufacturers, marketers and distributors... Baton Rouge Advocate Tells prospective entrepreneurs how to move an idea 'from thought to bought'--and roughly what inventors can expect to get in a licensing deal. Los Angeles Times Tells inventors everything they need to know to enter into a solid licensing agreement. Electronic News Stim, an intellectual property attorney and author, explains how to make licensing deals for inventions. He addresses ownership rights, including determining legal rights and protecting them under patent, trade secret, and copyright laws; soliciting licenses and dealing with agents, finding and soliciting prospective licensees, and protecting trade secrets during the solicitation and negotiation process; the license agreement, including its elements, how to keep information confidential, money aspects, the negotiation process, and drafting the licensing agreement oneself; and dealing with licensee changes to the agreement and issues that might come up after signing it. This edition has been updated with current licensing law and patent rules and covers the implications of the Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016. Eithne O Leyne, Editor, Ringgold, Inc. ProtoView Author Comments: In a survey of inventors, almost three-quarters believed their patents would earn them at least a million dollars. Over half thought their earnings would exceed $5 million. In reality, only 3% to 5% of patents earn money. In other words, no matter how hard it is to design and patent an idea, making money from that great idea is even harder. One reason this book continues to sell after twenty years is that, unlike the many get-rich-quick books that have come and gone, Profit From Your Idea is steeped in reality. I designed this book to protect inventors at every stage of the licensing process, from finding and negotiating that lucrative license to shielding inventors from unnecessary losses by honestly evaluating commercial potential. I believe this reality check is what keeps Profit From Your Idea a perennial seller. """Gives detailed instructions on working with manufacturers, marketers and distributors..."" Baton Rouge Advocate ""Tells prospective entrepreneurs how to move an idea 'from thought to bought'--and roughly what inventors can expect to get in a licensing deal."" Los Angeles Times ""Tells inventors everything they need to know to enter into a solid licensing agreement."" Electronic News ""Stim, an intellectual property attorney and author, explains how to make licensing deals for inventions. He addresses ownership rights, including determining legal rights and protecting them under patent, trade secret, and copyright laws; soliciting licenses and dealing with agents, finding and soliciting prospective licensees, and protecting trade secrets during the solicitation and negotiation process; the license agreement, including its elements, how to keep information confidential, money aspects, the negotiation process, and drafting the licensing agreement oneself; and dealing with licensee changes to the agreement and issues that might come up after signing it. This edition has been updated with current licensing law and patent rules and covers the implications of the Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016.""Eithne O""Leyne, Editor, Ringgold, Inc. ProtoView Author Comments: In a survey of inventors, almost three-quarters believed their patents would earn them at least a million dollars. Over half thought their earnings would exceed $5 million. In reality, only 3% to 5% of patents earn money. In other words, no matter how hard it is to design and patent an idea, making money from that great idea is even harder. One reason this book continues to sell after twenty years is that, unlike the many get-rich-quick books that have come and gone, Profit From Your Idea is steeped in reality. I designed this book to protect inventors at every stage of the licensing process, from finding and negotiating that lucrative license to shielding inventors from unnecessary losses by honestly evaluating commercial potential. I believe this reality check is what keeps Profit From Your Idea a perennial seller." Author InformationAttorney Richard Stim specializes in small business, copyright, patents, and trademark issues. He is the author of many Nolo books, including Music Law: How to Run Your Band's Business, Patent, Copyright & Trademark: An Intellectual Property Desk Reference, . and Profit From Your Idea. Stim regularly answers readers' intellectual property questions at Dear Rich: An Intellectual Property Blog. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |