Patents
Before you file for a patent it is important to understand a little about the process. It is possible that someone has had your idea, patented it and not done anything with it (thus the importance of a thorough patent search). It is also possible that someone may have already filed for a patent on your invention but it is still in the patent pending process. If it has already been patented you can find out about it. If it is in the patent pending process you must decide if you want to proceed with your own patent application hoping that you are the first. Patent pending applications are made public after 18 months if the inventor has not specifically indicated that he/she does not wish to have it made public (and they are not filing for any foreign patents). For the first 18 months after a patent has been applied for the patent pending applications are not made public so there is no way to find out if one is already in the system.
If your idea is great enough, your enthusiasm is great enough, the potential profit margin is great enough and your possible market is large enough, you may decide that you want to try for a patent. Only you can make that judgment call after you have conducted the most thorough patent search you possibly can.
There are a few ways to go about filing for your patent. The first, of course, is to go to a patent attorney. The second is to go to a patent agent. The third is to do it yourself with the help of patent application software or with the help of a book.
Hire a Patent Attorney
Our recommendation is to hire a patent attorney to do it for you if you can. We were really "shoe-stringing" it when we first invented Ghostline and we considered writing our patent application ourselves. Our plan was to find the existing patent that was closest to ours and use it as a sort of template to go by. In our case, anyway, that would have been a big mistake! Our patent attorney was able to write the claims in such a way that it made our patent much stronger than it would have been if we had done it ourselves. Scrimping on the attorney fees would have cost us dearly in the value of our final patent (assuming that would have been able to navigate our way through the process at all!).
When people hear that
for a patent attorney to file for a utility patent
often costs between $8,000.00-$10,000.00 it can be
discouraging. That is a lot of money to come up with.
What most people don't understand is that you do not
have to come up with the total amount at the start.
We paid around $2,500.00 to start and then paid other
fees as they were due. It is our understanding that
most patent attorneys allow clients to pay fees as
they come due and as work progresses on the patent.
Many patent attorneys do not charge at all for the
first visit with them when they evaluate the patent
ability of your invention. Check to be certain that
this is their policy, however, before scheduling an
appointment.
Need professional help writing your patent on your relatively simple invention but money is an issue? Try Dirt Cheap Patents. Contact them by clicking here. They may be able to save you thousands of dollars on your patent.
Use a Patent Agent
The second way to file for a patent is to use a patent agent. They are as qualified as patent attorneys to draw up and file your patent application (Patent Agents and Patent Attorneys have to pass the same test on their competency). Patent agents are not attorneys, however and could not represent you in court. Patent agents are usually substantially less expensive than patent attorneys.
Do it Yourself
The third way to file
for your patent is to do it yourself. You could check
out the patent writing software. There is a user-friendly
software program that guides you through the steps
and even has a patent attorney look over your application
before you submit it to the U. S. Patent and Trademark
Office. You can find it listed on the UIAUSA.com
website. We list another patent writing
software, Patent Ease, on our Helpful Books page.
Finally, you may choose to write and file for your patent yourself. If you choose this last option we would encourage you to get the book Patent It Yourself by David Pressman. That is not the only book that would be helpful. There are many others as well. Also, if you do choose to patent it yourself we would suggest that you have an attorney look over your application before you submit it. They will often do that for a reasonable fee.
Provisional Patent Application
If your purpose in filing
for a patent is to obtain the "patent pending" status
you may want to file a provisional patent application
instead of filing an application for a regular utility
patent. It costs only $100 to file a provisional
patent application and the format is much looser than
it is for filing for a regular utility patent. Basically
a provisional patent application will "hold your place
in line" at the patent office by allowing you the earliest
filing date possible. It will never result in an actual
patent.
Within one year after you file your provisional patent application, you must file for a regular patent or lose the advantage of the earlier filing date. Provisional patent applications are not even looked at by the examiners at the patent office.
Provisional patent applications are very attractive to some inventors because they allow the inventor to have as early a filing date as possible and it allows them to list their product as "patent pending." That gives the inventor one year in which to find a company to license his/her product without going to the expense of filing for a utility patent.
***IMPORTANT NOTE***
It is very important NOT
to divulge your invention to anyone (without a nondisclosure
agreement) because the USPTO has very strict regulations
about when you can file for a patent. You have ONE
YEAR from the time that you first make your invention
public (either by showing it to someone without a
nondisclosure agreement or by offering it for sale
or public use). The USPTO is VERY STRICT about that.
The one-year clock starts running the moment you "make
your invention public" and if you apply for the patent
one year and one day after that they will disallow
it. DON'T LET THE CLOCK RUN OUT ON YOUR INVENTION!
Rates vary widely for
writing Provisional Patent Applications. . Most attorneys
and agents charge between $800 and $2,400 to write
the provisional patent application.
Click " Non-Disclosure " to find a sample that you may print out.
Since laws may vary slightly
from state to state or country to country it is always
wise to have a local attorney look over the agreement
before using it.
Check this out! This letter came to us recently.
A FREE course to prepare your own Provisional Patent Application:
We are happy to provide you free access to our course, Do-It-Yourself Provisional Patent™. The 3-hour course is provided in 20 short segments, and we recommend that you watch six or seven segments at a time. The course is comprehensive and will enable you to write your own high-quality provisional patent application on your invention without the need for a patent attorney or any other resource.
The course is free to you with no strings attached. We do ask, as a courtesy, that you provide us feedback and/or a testimonial (if you are happy with the course) after you have completed it. Also, if you feel ready to take the next step and write your own nonprovisional application, our Do-It-Yourself Patent Course™ is available at www.PatentDVD.com.
Good luck!
Andrew Knight, J.D. and the Staff at Do-It-Yourself Patent Course™
For your guide to performing your own FREE preliminary patent search click here.
24/7 Patent & Trademark Information line provided by Straussberger & Price of San Antonio. The number is 210 250 6027. The information provided (i.e. the 12 most common misconceptions about patents) is well worth the cost of the telephone call.
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NOTE: You may perform free online patent searches at either www.uspto.gov (The official website of the United States Patent and Trademark office or www.freepatentsonline.com.
Google now has a new user-friendly patent search engine that you can find at