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Safeguarding Intellectual Property
by Kent Jacobson

Published on this site: July 22nd, 2006 - See more
articles from this month

Every company has Intellectual Property (technical and practical knowledge)
that is a critical component to its future. Your company standard processes
may not even identify a method to capture Intellectual Property (IP) or
define what IP is. Retention and definition of IP is key to your product and market place
profitability; take a look at your situation. More often than not, the
IP is isolated in the minds of your technical staff, scientists and senior
engineers and tenured technicians. These IP people are not paid to document
or capture their intellect, let alone reproduce in an understandable format
unless formally queried and reviewed by senior management. Initiate action
today to address your company's situation if there is a shortcoming in
this area.
Often there is no standard procedure to capture the IP in a documentation
format, thus it is not reproducible and has the high risk potential of
becoming lost or worse, transferred to the competition! In today's market
place there is a high probability of knowledge networking at trade shows,
seminars and technical subject matter symposiums. Do you honestly think
every person asking questions is a consumer? I do not think so, wake up
or you will loose your IP edge. Don't think this is true, just look at
the competitions products 3 months after a trade show, see any similarities?
Where to begin is simple, your technical director should have a couple
of standard process's outlined for defining to the staff what IP is and
how to capture it. Most companies have engineering journals that are company
property and issued to every new hire, but where this process falls short
is in the use and implementation. If your chief scientist has been with
the company 20 years, just thinks how may journals they might have filled out in longhand,
read any Rx prescriptions lately? The journals are probably not cataloged
or indexed that would allow easy identification and research of topics,
or even kept in a common storage area or library. It is not too late to
start reviewing how your IP personnel capture this technical data. Just ask a few questions
to get an idea, it should not take long and the results my startle you.
If you are paper rich and organized poorly, one method may be to electronically
scan the pages into archive database that can readily be indexed, searched
and identified. Yes, this method will take some work and possible equipment
purchase, but in the long run company IP survival is worth it. You may
task you technical staff to organize their own journals, and of course
look at the procedures when journals are issued. The first step should
be with the issuance of journals and assuring there are formal steps that
identify and implement how IP it to be documented and captures so the
company does not loose any more time.
You will know how to best address your situation, if you have a formal
method in place that is working great, many companies do not. Do not let
the isolated IP become lost, act today, good luck and I hope you are successful
in your endeavors."

Kent Jacobson, a.k.a. "Mr. Success" is a trusted authority
in the success field and provides valuable success information for free
through his website at: http://www.Shortcut2Success.com
. You can also read Kent's Success Blog to find more success secrets at:
http://www.Shortcut2Success.com/blog.


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