Posts Tagged ‘royalties’

By: Mark R. Malek

My good friend, Matt Yubas, will be hosting a seminar for inventors in Orlando on Saturday February 26, 2010.  Please click here for some information on the seminar.

Matt Yubas - Products Coach

I have been to one of Matt’s seminars before.  In fact, I presented a piece on patents and how inventors can protect their inventions at a seminar he did in Tampa a few years ago.  It was the first time that I attended one of Matt’s seminars and I was absolutely amazed at the amount of information that he can fit into roughly three hours.  During the seminar, Matt will cover topics such as licensing your invention, selling your invention to companies, royalties that can be expected, types of licenses available to inventors, and many other topics that any inventor should find valuable.

The point of this quick post is to let those inventors that read our blog know about the seminar.  The cost for the seminar is only $79 and I truly think that you’ll get your money’s worth.  Please ask me any questions that you have about the seminar.  Trust me – Matt’s one of the good guys!

Gravatar Iconby Mark Malek

Professor Dennis Crouch of Patently-O recently posted an article about the difficulties in collecting royalties pursuant to a patent licensing agreement.  In his post, Professor Crouch referenced a report by Invotex, which noted that 86% of licensees misreported their royalties to their licensor.  This, unfortunately, is not surprising, and is part of the reason why the process of entering into a patent (or any IP) licensing agreement can be so time consuming.

The Invotex report sets forth some of the very issues that a patent licensing attorney tries to avoid when entering into a licensing agreement on behalf of a client that is the licensor.  Often times, however, the negotiation process does not allow for the “tight” agreement that the licensor’s attorney wants.  Instead, licensing agreements can often be open to interpretation.

Some of the royalty reporting errors indicated in the Invotex report include questionable license interpretation, underreported sales, disallowed deductions, underreported sublicenses, and math errors.  There are, of course, ways to avoid these various debacles in the contracts.

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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 05, 2012

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