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June 6, 2005Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 1 Growing Revenues from your Intellectual Property With BML’s Strategic Opportunity Cube Finding Opportunities in Information 1- Anthony Trippe, Identifying Haystacks from Space... a Patinformatics 1 tool
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 2 The Value of Intellectual Property n “In a strictly legal sense intellectual property is a nebulous subject, hard even for the lawyers to master and puzzling for anyone else-- including the people who come up with good ideas. n One things is for certain however: The market for intellectual property generates and enormous amount of money. n And this money comes from all fronts, from those who own valuable intangible assets to those who make a living out of lawyering, maintaining and managing the intangible assets of others” The Value of a Good Idea, Silver Lake Press
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 3 Where’s the Value? n Selling the IP n Licensing the IP –Limited Licenses n Selling the Company n Investing in IP – Making the right choices
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 4 Extracting the Value The Real Estate Analogy n Real Estate Broker –Makes Deals n Real Estate Appraiser –Appraises Real Estate n Real Estate Surveyor –Measures Real Estate n Intellectual Property Broker –Makes Deals involving IP n IP Valuer –Values Intellectual Property n Intellectual Property Cartographer –Measures and organizes Intellectual Property Intellectual Asset Management
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 5 Measuring the Value Location, Location, Location Measuring the value of patents is like measuring that of real estate. A patent’s value depends on where it is located in a landscape formed by patents held by a company and patents held by its competitors
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 6 Valuation Methods n Income Method n *CAV n **Black Shoals-- Option Method n Asset Method * Ted Haglein " A new method to value Intellectual Property" AIPLA Quarterly Journal (30 AIPLA Q.J. 353) ** Nir Kossovsky, " Is the Average Patent Worthless?" Intellectual Asset Management, Aug/Sept 2004 pp 7-10
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 7 The Strategic Opportunity Cube Technology Applications Markets Similar Content Choice of Perspectives
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 8 Example from an analysis using the Strategic Opportunity Cube n Two companies who hold patents are contemplating a merger or acquisition-- n One has about twice the number of patents as the other. But what is the value of the patents of one company to the other? Do we simply count them?
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 9 Technology Most in Common Key Cell- Most Patents in Common Technology/Product Cross Section Company A Company B Both Products Technologies
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 10 Snapshot of Key Cell
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June 6, 2005 Copyright 2004 - Business Metamorphosis LLC 11 Learning's from Analysis n Both Companies patent most heavily in fundamental areas of semiconductor manufacture –Optical Lithography –Silicon Refining –Defect Identification n The area with the most similar patents is fundamental uses of Optical Lithography - –By purchasing Motorola,Texas Instruments more than doubles its portfolio in this area However the snapshot shows that almost all of those patents are by Honsinger applied to Analog Conversion- The markets for TI and Motorola are totally separate n Motorola’s Unique patents are in Optical Switching and ASICS
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