Licensing Your Invention: Dealing with a Big Corporation
You’ve protected your invention with a provisional patent. You’ve made a working prototype that you can use to demonstrate to an investor or licensee. You’ve studied the market and you’re convinced that you have a dynamite invention. The next step? You’ve decided not to venture, but to find a licensee to purchase the rights to your invention.
The first thing you need to do is identify the top two or three companies in the industry relevant to your invention. Generally, large, publicly owned companies are the safest ones to work with and will have the biggest distribution channels. However, the bigger the company, the greater is the internal inertia. You may find success with a smaller, more nimble company that is willing to move quickly and take greater risks.
There are a few key tips that will help you identify the companies that will pay the best price on the best terms for your invention. Chances are, you’ll be pitching your idea to a company that has deep pockets and the resources to effectively manufacture and market your invention.
Here are a few words about those big corporations that could either make you rich or drive you crazy - or both.
It’s Not Easy Being Big
Life as a Fortune 500 company is not easy. The company’s huge size makes it hard to maneuver quickly. Ponderous bureaucracies built through years of focusing and creating efficiencies for a single product family or a single market can make development of new ideas exceedingly difficult.
Large companies are generally conservative. Investors in large corporations demand predictable investment returns, leaving little incentive for the corporations to make significant changes. Employees are often well compensated, with nice benefit and retirement packages, and there is little upside to taking individual risk or exerting extraordinary individual effort. Those entrepreneurial employees with visions of change and growth are often quickly squelched and either “reprogrammed” or banished from the corporate kingdom. Others give up thinking outside the box after repeatedly getting batted down by corporate planners, like so many fleas-in-training slamming against the lid of a Mason jar.
Besides the fixed inertia of the corporate culture, costs are often incredibly high in large corporations due to bloated overhead structures and high labor costs. Few brass-ring incentives exist in established corporations for motivating employees to exhibit the type of personal sacrifice that is commonplace in scrappy corporate startups. Where it’s expected at a new company to see founders pulling sequential all-nighters on their new projects, the vast majority of hours dedicated to any project in the large company setting are paid for at fully loaded hourly engineering rates. The lowest-level technicians in large companies, and in many companies even the rank and file engineers, are often covered by labor agreements negotiated based on core-business profitability models resulting in pay and benefit packages that could never be considered by a new startup. Surprisingly, it is often just too expensive for big corporations to consider new venture areas, especially where rapid development cycles are required.
Moving quickly is not just a cost problem in large organizations. New projects generally require long startup review cycles and budget plans corresponding to regular quarterly or annual windows. Getting a buy-in for a new idea requires layers of meetings, approvals, and proposals, and endless market testing.
The personal consequences of project failures in a big corporation can be professionally devastating for the individuals involved, who may have years of service or careers invested with the company. Individuals and small ventures can tread with abandon where professional managers and other bureaucrats would be terrified to go. Every step in the big company must be planned, scripted, budgeted and approved. Few employees in a large corporate structure are willing to take the individual risks often essential for the success of a new venture.
For these reasons, it is difficult for large companies to compete efficiently against nimble entrepreneurs in area of rapid innovation.
Corporations As Good Citizens
Beyond the issues of competitiveness, large publicly held corporations take great pains to avoid stealing ideas from others.
First of all, most large corporations try to operate ethically. That is not to say that such companies will avoid playing hardball or be anything but extremely competitive, but most well-run corporations will avoid lying, cheating, or stealing in the operation of their businesses. They do so because it is the right thing to do. Corporations are often owned by tens of thousands or more shareholders; such companies have a duty to the shareholders to operate in a way that is good for the company and good for those who have invested in the shares. Most boards of directors take this responsibility to heart and require that the company’s management operates with a high degree of ethics in all dealings, whether it be with employees, vendors, competitors, or the general public.
Businesses operate ethically because it makes good business sense. Companies that double-cross vendors, partners and employees eventually face consequences that negatively impact efficiency and profitability. A company that treats its employees poorly will eventually suffer labor problems. Businesses that steal ideas and inventions from those individuals and companies who seek partnering relationships with the company will eventually find that the flow of new ideas into their company is being diverted to the competition. Nowhere is it more true than in business that “what goes around comes around.”
Moreover, infringing upon the technology of others can be costly from a legal standpoint. No large company wants to be dragged before a jury by a small inventor claiming that the behemoth company stole his idea. Juries and reporters are just too unpredictable in these cases.
When you approach a big company, remember with whom you’re dealing. Think of it as like getting into a boat. When you step into a little speedboat you can start the engine and go. But when you walk up the gangway to a huge ocean liner, you’re entering a floating city that is built to travel in a straight line across vast oceans.
Don't Get Mugged by the Big Corporation
Despite the general benevolence exhibited by most large companies towards independent inventors, you still want to do everything in your power to ensure that you recieve full credit for your invention. There are some simple steps that you can take early on when developing your idea to safeguard your IP:
- Keep careful records of your invention in an inventor’s notebook or file
- Conduct a patent search
- File provisional patent applications on new inventions, where possible, prior to disclosing them publicly
- Register copyrights where appropriate and use a TM logo
When and if you choose to enter into a dialogue with an established company, make sure you:
- Conduct discussions with all companies in writing. After oral discussions, enter discussion notes in your invention notebook
- Make liberal use of non-disclosure agreements
- Send a follow-up letter. It’s like a backdoor NDA stating this is what we discussed, and that the information is proprietary
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