Oct 29

Stoneman Volk Patent Group is pleased to announce that the San Diego satellite office is now open.  This office will allow us to better serve our present and future Southern California clients.   Currently, the satellite office is open by appointment and is conveniently located in downtown San Diego on Broadway.  We welcome San Diego present and prospective clients to meet with us personally either at their place of business or at the new satellite office.

Please call for an appointment at (888) 252-2200.

Aug 28

Stoneman Volk Patent Group is opening a satellite office in San Diego, California in order to better serve its present and future Southern California clients. Initially, the satellite office will be part-time and located in downtown San Diego on Broadway. As the need arises, the office will eventually be full-time. We welcome San Diego present and prospective clients to meet with us personally either at their place of business or at our coming satellite office.

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Aug 11
  1. Making maximum use of US provisional patent-application practices
    • before filing non-provisionals
    • after filing non-provisionals
    • before filing PCT and/or other direct international cases
    • after filing PCT and/or other direct international cases
    • as a series of improvements
  2. Having ways to file patents applications which can safely include as many related teaching/suggestions as possible to assist
    • getting an early filing date on as many ideas as possible for the lowest budget while
      • avoiding making admissions that may injure you in prosecution
      • handling situations where it’s more budget-able to file a single “omnibus” application than several limited-scope applications
  3. Making budget-efficient use of
    • continuation applications
    • divisional applications
    • examiner interviews
    • partial issuance
    • appeals
    • design applications
    • trade dress remedies
    • defensive publications

This blog will be updated regularly with expansion and other topics related to BEST BANG for hard-times budgets. After completing an “outline” approach to topics about “Selecting Patent Advisors”, we will expand those topics with examples, discussion, etc.

Copyright June 2009 Patentdoc, All Rights Reserved

Jun 26

This Blog, although not legal advice (see a lawyer!), includes specific practical advice about how companies and individuals with good ideas can maximize patent protection and/or services with any given budget – from zero on up.  The first blogs will focus on: Budget invention protection: How to get the BEST BANG for the budget, and this blog will begin to give pointers about Selecting Patent Advisors.

The three most important areas in “Best Bang” selecting of patent advisors are to ensure:

1)      Up-front fixed charges;

2)      Tactical toolkit with enough variety for any budget; and

3)      Technical and business creativity.

Your patent advisor must:

1)      not charge you for initial learning about your invention and business goals;

2)      quote in writing an up-front exact fixed charge for a specified service “job” (no “hourly billing” or “nickel/diming” e.g., about copies, stamps, travel, meetings, phone calls, etc.);

3)      collaborate in setting a fixed charge in line with your budget amount by modifying (by reducing or expanding) the scope of the services;

4)      have a tactical arsenal (a coming Patentdoc blog will deal with this “arsenal” in detail) with enough variety to best match the business goals relating to the invention to any given budget;

5)      permit you to set a budget plan specified over a given day-to-year time frame in terms of (a) total budget and (b) available cash flow versus timeframe;

6)      take the time and have the ability to fully understand (a) your invention in all its aspects and (b) your optimum “scope of work” level for your budget; and

7)      specify (or collaborate to specify) the level of client co-operation relied on in quoting prices and dates of the services.

Lastly, you should try to avoid:

1)      open-ended agreements

2)      oral agreements

3)      hourly billing

4)      “estimates” that are not absolutely fixed in price

5)      “costs” charges that are not fixed or identified explicitly

6)      services that do not specify finish dates

This blog will be updated regularly with expansions and other topics related to BEST BANG for hard-times budgets.

Copyright by Patentdoc June 26 , 2009

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