The team at Think IP Strategy has been kicking around their list of top IP mistakes. We’ve listed them here for you and we’ll give you a more detailed post on each and everyone.
What would you add? We’ll happily do an extra post on any new ones you suggest.
(They are in no particular order, because as you know, that depends on context.)
5. Fail to Protect Associated IC
6. Infringe IP
8. Have No Publication Strategy
10. File Too Late
11. Treat IP as purely a Legal Issue
14. Spend Too Much to Protect Too Little
15. Spend Too Little to Protect Too Much
16. Misunderstand the Strength of IP
17. Build Static Instead of Dynamic Defenses
20. Fail to Leverage Outside Innovation
21. Become Mired in the Day-to-Day
22. Fail to Optimize the Portfolio
23. Fail to align IP strategy with Business Strategy
25. Accept the Tyranny of the Toos: Too hard, expensive, difficult, confusing, etc.
26. Take the Advice of Counsel on Faith
28. Be Satisfied with the Status Quo
33. Develop IP that no one wants
34. Fail to Monitor IP (suggested by ‘mc’ – see below and thanks again)
35. Fail to Abandon IP (suggested by ‘Chuit’ – see below and thanks again)
36. Fail to Value IP Literacy in Staff at all levels (suggested by ‘Ruth Soetendorp’ – see below and thanks again)
37. Fail to include IP Awareness on staff training agenda (suggested by ‘Ruth Soetendorp’ – see below and thanks again)
38. Fail to communicate IP Strategy as part of your marketing plan (suggested by ‘Dids MacDonald’ – see below and thanks again)
39. Claim too much (in patent claims) [And I would add, 'or too little', and broaden this to Trade Marks and Designs as well.] (suggested by ‘Naim Kuhn’ – see below and thanks again)
40. Fail to clearly assign IP responsibility within the organisation (suggested by AJ with slight modification – see below and thanks again)
41. Seeing things as we wish them to be
42. Planning without the ideal strategy in mind
43. Do it yourself IP Strategy
44. Withholding important information from legal advisers
45. Miss the point on benchmarking
46. Think that there are only 50 IP mistakes that you can make (suggested by Philip Argy – see below and thanks again)
47. Make dangerous interpretations
48. Focus on the lesser value in licensing
50. Fail to lead







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