Vapor
From Shanghai to the World
Last
month an announcement attracted much attention among the global IP
professionals. An international patent portfolio had settled in
Shanghai. According to the source, it is the first of its kind in
China.[1]
The
announcement indicates that this patent pool covers more than 50
technical fields and has an international patent portfolio with more
than 12,000 patents. It targets Chinese SMEs which need to upgrade their
operation with more advanced technologies but fall short of developing
their own.
The pool will operate with standardized
licensing terms. Available licensing durations are one year, three
years, five years, and ten years.
Will They Succeed?
A
Non-Practicing Entity (NPE) is a well-established business model in the
US. However, the potential of such a business model seems limited in
China for two reasons from the analysis of Innovation’s Crouching Tiger (www.ictiger2020.com).
First,
Chinese culture tends to favor harmony over confrontation. The business
community does not entirely embrace the idea of the western adversary
judicial system, and this business model relies on litigation and
effective enforcement.
Second, Chinese courts have been acting
in line with a global trend that becomes less friendly to NPEs, as
exemplified in the America Invents Act (AIA) enacted in the US in 2011.
The Blossoming of New IP Business Models
However, no matter whether this new project in Shanghai succeeds or not, similar ventures will continue.
In
China, the interest in exploring IP business opportunities was
stimulated by the successful global stories, including Getty Museum,
Intellectual Ventures, and international research institutions, such as
MIT. They all operate profitable models based on IP monetization.
This
interest group was small at the beginning. However, in the past few
years, thanks to the government policy and the long-tail effect of
prevalent social media, the discussions, debates, and experiments of new
IP business models have arrived at a new level. The heat has even gone
beyond this professional circle to attract the larger business
community.
As China’s IP regime develops, more proven business
models originated from developed countries are now starting to flourish
in China. For example, numerous projects of IP securitization, IP
brokerages, and patent-based public stock indexes have been gaining
their business volumes.
The Most Promising New Models
In
2019, SpringIP Group – a company dedicated to enterprise innovation
through AI and big data – published a survey about this phenomenon.
Using a framework from previous researchers[2], SpringIP applied its proprietary methodology to the information and opinions collected in the US and China.
In
conclusion, SpringIP Group identified the top four most promising IP
business models in China for the next ten years. As summarized in the
following table, the top four most promising models are:
#1 IP/Technology Development Companies
#2 IP-Backed Financiers
#3 University Technology Transfer Intermediaries
#4 Technology/IP Spinout Financing
Interested
in the methodology of this survey and how to use it to develop a viable
IP business model in China? See more insights by visiting our blog at ICTiger2020.com or Facebook at ICTiger2020 for related news updates. Contact author at Jili_ICT@springip.com.
IP Business Opportunities in China (2019) —— Surveyed by SpringIP Group (智汇权科技)
[1]http://www.chinaipmagazine.com/en/news-show.asp?id=12018
[2]See
the framework in, A Summary of Established & Emerging IP Business
Models, by Raymond Millien PCT Capital LLC and Ron Laurie Inflexion
Point Strategy LLC – 2008.
Source:iprdaily.com
Author:Jili Chung
Editor:IPRdaily-Vapor