30 Apr 2019

House of Commons summit: Intellectual property vital for British economic growth

A House of Commons summit has thrown the spotlight on how British businesses need to educate themselves on intellectual property (IP) and how it can help them succeed in a tough economic climate – or if Britain leaves the EU.

Patsnap
PatSnap team

 

Top IP institutions, law firms, universities and business leaders from the automotive industry attended the conference on Wednesday April 24 hosted by the Intellectual Property Awareness Network (IPAN) and backed by the leading IP business intelligence solutions and open, online training courses, PatSnap.

The aim of the summit, held ahead of the World Intellectual Property Organisation’s (WIPO) World IP Day (Friday April 26), was to encourage the influential attendees to work together to develop policy and support education that will help British businesses harness the benefits of IP to support innovation in order to stay competitive in a global marketplace.

Duncan Clark, director of Academy at Patsnap, said: “It is a well-known fact that 80% of a company’s value is in intangible assets such as IP, but unfortunately many British companies aren’t making it part of their business strategy. Instead, they’re only learning about IP when it’s far too late or when it becomes a legal issue.” 

“If we can create the environment to help British businesses utilise IP in their strategy from the outset, we will have a strong economic advantage over our competitors. This will be particularly useful to the British automotive industry which needs to find a way to stay afloat when Britain leaves the EU.”

David Wong is senior tech and innovation manager at the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, representing the views of the UK’s £82billion automotive industry. He commented: “Automotive is often seen as the “sunset industry” but I beg to differ. I see something more exciting and exhilarating than ever before and IP is the fulcrum of this transformation.”

Stephen Lambert is head of automotive electrification at McLaren Applied Technologies, a leader in the power electronic sector contributing nearly £50billion to the UK economy. He added: “In our world, we face rapid development, we have to fix problems quickly and have an innovative mindset. But IP isn’t in the average mindset of an engineer because filing patents means you lose your competitive advantage. We need to use IP more to retain our innovation culture and protect what we have.”

John Ogier, chair and convenor of the Finance, Business and Economics Group, IPAN, said: “IP is based on the power of innovative imagination. The world is changing fast and motoring needs to be reimagined for the 21st century alongside the fifth industrial revolution, which has seen the introduction of AI and globalisation.”

Chris Skidmore, minister of state for universities, science, research and innovation, said: “Britain is a world leader because of IP. It underpins everything we do in the economy itself and is fundamental to this country’s success. We need to provide a smooth and effective IP system regardless of Brexit and we need to be prepared for all eventualities, whatever the outcome. IP is not a “Cinderella” subject in government and we need to work together as one single IP community.”

According to WIPO, one of the biggest mistakes start-ups make is failing to create a well-thought out IP strategy. For this reason, in 2017 PatSnap launched the first ever free online Academy for R&D organisations, inventors and entrepreneurs to educate themselves about IP and why it needs to be an integral part of their business strategy. 

Duncan Clark added: “Countless start-ups make the fatal mistake of seeing IP as a ‘bolt on’, with many only coming across it when they’re faced with a legal battle. The video-led courses PatSnap runs on the Academy are not about making people legal experts – rather, they educate them on the basics of what theyreally need to know in order to be able to innovate and commercialise successfully. Unfortunately many start-ups fail because they do not to harness the benefits of IP.”

Since 2017, Academy by PatSnap has collaborated with some of the world’s top IP experts in order to provide free, open intellectual property education to its community of over 3,000 members. Academy was recently welcomed as a member of IPAN (Intellectual Property Awareness Network), a non-profit network of organisations and individuals that campaigns to raise awareness and understanding of intellectual property.

 

You can access the course for free here.

 


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