The Office of the Independent Inventor of the
United States Patent and Trademark Office has graciously granted their
permission to reprint the following, their brochure, “Are You the Target?” on
our site.
Dear
Inventor,
Every year
thousands of Independent Inventors, like yourself, are targeted by
unscrupulous invention promotion, marketing and licensing firms.
These
firms take advantage of an inventor’s enthusiasm for their product. They not
only solicit inventors with exaggerated promises to obtain valuable patents
but they make false claims about the potential market success of those
inventions.
These
firms provide you with basic market research at a large fee and ultimately
obtaining an overly narrow or useless patent that is worthless in the
marketplace.
Remember, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
Please read the
following!
INVENTORS BEWARE
DO
write a letter to any promotion, marketing or licensing company that
seeks to help you and ask for written answers to the TEN QUESTIONS listed
here.
DO
use common sense in
evaluating the answers. If they make sense, fine. If not, seek assistance
from a patent attorney or agent or, contact the Office of Independent Inventor
Programs at the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
DO
get information and answers
in writing, signed by a company official before you pay any money or
sign any document.
DO
be alert for the scam warning signs and hooks.
DO NOT
accept verbal promises,
assurances or representations.
DO NOT
be a victim of a scam.
ASK TEN QUESTIONS
SAVE THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS!!
Get answers to these
questions in writing from any promotional,
marketing or licensing company wanting to help you. Helpful hints are
given in the brackets.
-
Total number of inventions evaluated for commercial potential in the past
five years by the Company and how many
of those evaluations were positive and accepted by the Company
and how many were negative and rejected
by the Company.
[Legitimate firms have
fairly low acceptance rates, usually under 5%].
- Total number of
customers, known by the Company, who have received a
net financial profit as a direct result of the Company’s
promotion services and what is the
Company’s success rate over the past five years
[that is, the number of clients who have made more money from their
invention than they have paid to the Company].
-
Names and addresses of all previous
invention promotion companies with which the Company or its officers have
collectively or individually been affiliated in the previous 10 years
and what other names has the Company used
in this or other states.
- Total number of
customers, known by the Company, to have received license agreements for
their inventions as a direct result of the Company’s services.
[If the success rate is too low, say less than
2-5%, then think about going elsewhere.]
- How
many customers 9inventors or their representatives) have contracted with the
Company for promotional services in the past 5 years;
excluding those who have
purchased trade show services, research, advertising or other non-marketing
services and excluding those who have
defaulted on payments to the company.
- If there an
up-front fee, if so, how much is it and what are you getting for it? How
much will the complete process cost from submission of my invention to
obtaining a patent and a licensing agreement?
[Reputable firms have relatively small, if any, upfront or other fees
because they make their real money from successful royalty arrangements for
the inventions they accept.]
- Has
the Company ever been investigated by or been in trouble with the Federal
Trade Commission, Better Business Bureau, any consumer protection agency or
Attorney General’s Office and if so, when and where?
- Who selects and
pays for the patent attorney or agent to do the patent search, patent
ability opinion and patent application preparation?
[You should be able to select your own, because the attorney or agent
represents you, not the Company.]
- Provide you with
the names, addresses and phone numbers of five clients of the Company in
your geographical area and copies of all contracts and forms to review
[Do this before signing or paying any money].
- Does the Company
provide a written opinion of the “marketability” (that is, potential
success) of your invention? [If all you get is
a market analysis, for example, the number of potential customers, it’s
probably not worth much.]
TOP TEN SCAM WARNING SIGNS
·
·
Slick ads on radio, TV and magazines
[These are the first “hooks”].
·
·
The Company’s refusal to respond to
your questions in writing signed by a Company official [Legitimate
Companies will provide the answers in writing.]
·
·
Salespersons want money right away. .
. upfront.
·
·
You are told to describe your idea in
writing, mail it to yourself and don’t open the envelope because that will
prove your date of invention. [This is worthless advice.]
·
·
You are promised a patent search but
no patent ability opinion signed by a patent attorney or agent. [This
should be provided to you.]
·
·
You are guaranteed to get a patent or
your money back. [No one can guarantee issuance of a useful patent]
·
·
You are advised to apply for a design
patent. [This type of patent has limited applicability to most inventions.]
·
·
You can’t reach salespeople or company
officials without leaving many messages. [Maybe there is no real office
location or company.]
·
·
You are told that your idea is a
“sure-fire” hit! [Probably every client of this company is told that. Be
skeptical!]
·
·
The Company refuses to provide client
references or copies of forms and agreements for your review. [Get at
least five names in your area to contact and show the forms to an attorney
before signing.]
BEWARE OF THE “HOOKS” THAT LURE YOU INTO A SCAM
Unscrupulous invention promotion, marketing or licensing companies use a
series of “hooks” to lure you into the company’s web:
1st
– the “free” inventor’s kit;
2nd
– phone calls to get your money for an invention evaluation;
3rd
– the evaluation then leads to a request for more money to create a report;
4th
– the “report,” in a nicely bound book, says that your invention is patentable
and marketable; and
5th
– now there is need for more money to continue the process of getting a patent
and marketing your invention.
CONTACT
Director, Office of Independent Inventor Programs
United
States Patent and Trademark Office
Box 24
Washington, D.C. 20231
Web
site:
www.uspto.gov
Telephone: 703-306-5568
Fax:
703-306-5570
E-mail:
[email protected]
Acknowledgements:
Ftc.gov
Uspto.gov