A nice overview of the range of intellectual property protections available to a startup.
As someone who deals with early-stage startups all the time, the number one mistake I see concerns "do-it-yourself" founders who fail to take proper steps to transfer their IP into their startup at inception. In other words, they will form their entity themselves, use some online kit to do as simple a setup as possible, and ignore the IP issues altogether, which means that whatever IP they had developed prior to formation, or that they continue to develop even after formation, will continue to belong to them individually or to other third parties such as contractors, and will not belong to the company.
This is usually a harmless error in that it can later be corrected once it is discovered, but only if all the founders (and other third parties such as contractors) are cooperative about it. If they are not, this situation can lead to serious problems, especially if the problems are first unearthed during due diligence in the course of a funding or acquisition.
The article mentions this problem in summing up the most frequent mistakes in this area and otherwise has intelligent insights and observations throughout.
There are two pieces to this: first, for all IP-related work done prior to formation, the founders will typically assign their IP to the company for a nominal valuation, usually in connection with paying a token dollar amount for their stock; second, if the founders continue to do IP-related work following formation and issuance of their initial stock to them, they need either to be employees or contractors in relation to their company and, in either case, need to have in place some mechanism that ensures capture of their continuing IP-related work product for the company (this is usually a work-for-hire agreement if they are contractors or an employee invention assignment agreement if they are employees).
Those are the basics. Beyond this, you need to ensure that proper "consideration" is given to the founders to make the IP transfers legally binding. For the pre-formation IP transferred in connection with the stock grants, this is not an issue. For post-formation work, this takes the form of continued vesting of stock (if vesting is in place), often coupled with some form of very modest deferred compensation that is needed to minimize tax risks to the founders.
They sued because Sony and Microsoft's controllers vibrated. I'm not sure this patent is the poster child for why the IP system is awesome. I love Steve's work, but I'd like to see some acknowledgement that there might be a wider cost to society from chasing patents like these.
My interpretation is that IP is something that you have to deal with, even if you don't think it matters. The ways that he suggests you deal with it are to (a) explicitly assign IP early, (b) document external communications of novel ideas and file provisional patents before one year is up, (c) be aware of IP when negotiating with contractors and customers. Those sound reasonable even for startups, and will hopefully keep you out of trouble (or provide unexpected value) later on. IP is unlikely to pay out, but so is your startup.
Funny, this article reminded me to check, and one of my Arbor patents just got published.
From 2002.
That's about all you need to know about patents for startups. From the time you file to 6-9 years afterwards, the expense and effort of a filing buys you nothing. Meanwhile, the world continues to turn on its axis.
Is your company even going to be around for 9 years?
Of course, having the patent published doesn't really change much either. That's because you can safely add several more years to reach the date at which you'll actually see the inside of a courtroom if you decide to exploit the patent. It takes forever. With your counsel's meter running the whole time.
As someone who deals with early-stage startups all the time, the number one mistake I see concerns "do-it-yourself" founders who fail to take proper steps to transfer their IP into their startup at inception. In other words, they will form their entity themselves, use some online kit to do as simple a setup as possible, and ignore the IP issues altogether, which means that whatever IP they had developed prior to formation, or that they continue to develop even after formation, will continue to belong to them individually or to other third parties such as contractors, and will not belong to the company.
This is usually a harmless error in that it can later be corrected once it is discovered, but only if all the founders (and other third parties such as contractors) are cooperative about it. If they are not, this situation can lead to serious problems, especially if the problems are first unearthed during due diligence in the course of a funding or acquisition.
The article mentions this problem in summing up the most frequent mistakes in this area and otherwise has intelligent insights and observations throughout.