Should I Do a Patent Search before a Provisional Patent?

Patent Rights: Should Patent Search Come Before Provisional Patent? “Do you recommend doing a patent search before applying for a provisional patent or should you do the provisional patent right away? I have a product that is already on the market, and want to know if it has an active patent. Thanks for your time.”…

What Should I Know about Including Documents in My Patent Submission?

The documents you submit will be added in an appendix to your provisional patent upon your request, but this will not be done without your authorization. It is important that you do not disclose any confidential information in your submitted documents. It is also important that you do not disclose anything in your document that…

What Format Do Patent Drawings Have to Be Submitted in?

Figures submitted with a provisional application can be informal.  A figure can be a hand drawing, a photograph, a CAD illustration, VISIO files, flow charts, block diagrams, or any other type of visualization of your invention.  They do not need to contain labels or be referenced to the description portion of your Provisional Patent, though…

Why Should I Get a Provisional Patent?

A provisional application for patent is the most cost effective way to begin protecting your invention. It establishes your priority to the patent rights for your invention while you put the finishing touches on it, work up your non-provisional patent application, seek funding and do market research. With a provisional application on file, you can…

What’s the Difference between a Provisional Patent and a Non-Provisional Patent Application?

A patent grants an inventor rights to exclude others from making, using, or selling the idea claimed in the patent for a period of 20 years. A non-provisional patent application begins the examination process to determine if an idea is eligible for patent grant. This examination process (known as “Patent Prosecution”) can be long, highly…

What Is the Quickest Way to Get Patent Pending Status?

A USPTO provisional patent application simply secures your ‘spot in line’ or patent priority date for a patent for one-year under “patent pending” status. After you file a provisional application, you will have one-year to follow with a non-provisional (full) patent application to maintain your patent priority date. It’s important to secure your patent priority…

When Should I File a Non-Provisional Patent Application?

You do not need to have realized, developed, implemented the subject of a patent application in order to be granted patent protection.  Many inventors and companies file non-provisional patent applications on simple ideas and they are awarded patents.  The USPTO, or most any jurisdiction of the developed world, does not require that the subject of…

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