Creating Profit Through Alliances - business models for collaboration E-book | Page 92

collaboration, and for patents that are filed after the collaboration has been terminated. Most parties that regularly file patent applications will have their trusted specialists to conduct the negotiations. For collaborations in which patent applications are less a matter of course, the „Intellectual property needs matrix‟ by Slowinski and Sagal can offer some basic guidance35. This matrix is elaborated for a joint venture in Figure 30. Patents developed previous to partnership (background knowledge) Patents developed during partnership (foreground knowledge) Within the context of collaboration Patents remain with A and B, free use within the joint venture Patent becomes property of joint venture, free use for A and B for the designated goal Outside the context of collaboration Use right for the partner if the developed patent builds on former patent Patent becomes property of joint venture or of the partner to whose business the patent applies, but free use for the other After termination of collaboration Previously awarded use rights remain in place New patents owned by A or B, free use of patents developed in the joint venture Four complicating factors A number of complicating factors may crop up while forming an alliance. Four such factors, which are irrespective of the type of alliance or its legal form, are discussed below. Difference in size Figure 30, Possible arrangements for patent rights in a joint venture Figure 31 outlines the arrangements for a contractually arranged collaboration. The main difference is that, in this case, there is no shared company to which the patent rights can be allocated. Patents developed previous to partnership (background knowledge) Patents developed during partnership (foreground knowledge) Within the context of collaboration Patents remain with A and B, free use for the partner if a patent developed in collaboration builds on a previous patent The patent ownership remains with the one that actually discovered it, but free use right for the partner Outside the context of collaboration In principle no use right, but paid licence is possible Ownership with A or B, no use right for the partner After termination of collaboration Previously awarded use rights remain in place Previously awarded use rights remain in place Figure 31, Possible arrangements for patent rights in a contractually arranged collaboration 90 Whenever a smaller company collaborates with a larger company, chances are that the collaboration carries much more significance for the smaller one. This places it at risk of being neglected or overshadowed by the larger company. A change of management in the larger company can even mean a loss of all interest in the collaboration. The larger company, meanwhile, faces a different risk: it is likely that the knowledge and commitment of the smaller company strongly depends on just a