Patent Savvy for Managers: Spot & Protect Valuable Innovations in Your Company |  | Author: Kirk Teska Attorney Publisher: NOLO Category: Book
List Price: $29.99 Buy New: $8.70 as of 9/6/2010 16:10 CDT details You Save: $21.29 (71%)
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Seller: ibidubid2t0me Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 694475
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Pages: 275 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 9 x 7 x 0.9
ISBN: 1413306942 Dewey Decimal Number: 346.730486 EAN: 9781413306941 ASIN: 1413306942
Publication Date: October 25, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Find out how to spot and protect your company's innovations!
When it comes to patents, there's no room for mistakes. Making the wrong decision can send a business into an irreversible tailspin, costing your company millions of dollars -- not to mention jobs.
Luckily, you have a friendly resource to help you out: Patent Savvy for Managers. Loaded with fascinating case studies, this book is an essential asset for anyone entrusted with protecting a company's products or processes.
Patent Savvy for Managers provides all the information you need to:
identify and evaluate company patents organize patent committees work with patent attorneys read and understand patents
Friendly, informative and straight to the point, Patent Savvy for Managers offers the ideal blend of legal information, practical insights and real-world examples.
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| Customer Reviews: A Must-Read for the Technology Manager February 26, 2008 Ronald D. Slusky (New York, NY) 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
Teska's book is must-read for every inventor and manager concerned with protecting intellectual property. So much about the patenting process can be arcane, confusing, and counter-intuitive to the non-patent professional. It does all make sense--even the claims!!!--once you understand the patent system's underlying philosophies, but somebody has to lay it all out for you.
Teska's book does that. It is at once an informative and accessible read. I particularly resonated with Teska's 25 or so "Patent Myths," which encapsulate so much of what the potential inventor and her manager probably think (wrongly!) about the patent process. Been there, done that with my own clients.
Patent Savvy for Managers will help the reader answer such threshold questions as: "Is there an invention here that could be patented? and "Will it be worthwhile to do so?" Also, by cluing in the reader as to what the patent attorney is trying to accomplish in drafting the patent application, Teska prepares the inventor and her manager to participate more fully and more intelligently in the patenting process--including evaluating the patent attorney's proposed claims to make sure that the invention is properly protected.
This would be a good book, too, for a patent attorney to share with clients. "Read this," the attorney might say, "and you'll see what we are trying to accomplish."
A book like this is long overdue--especially for managers in smaller companies with no in-house IP legal resources. In fact I had been planning to write one just like it. Now I'm not so sure. Teska has already done it.
Ronald Slusky
Author of: Invention Analysis and Claiming: A Patent Lawyer's Guide
The Best Book on Patents for Managers -- Ever September 11, 2008 Jason P. Demont (Phoenix, AZ USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
If you want to understand patents, this is the book for you. It is extremely well written, and is at the perfect level of abstraction for engineers, inventors, and managers who must deal with patents.
I cannot give this book a higher recommendation.
Covers the basics of patent law and patent system for biz people, engineers, and project managers so they can be patent literate September 22, 2008 Jeff Lippincott (Princeton, NJ USA) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I liked this book a lot. It is VERY well written and outlined. It tells you up front what it is going to talk about, and then it does it in a logical sequential manner. Something I have not been finding a lot of in books I have been reviewing lately.
Patent law is one of a few legal practice areas in which few attorneys involve themselves. I suppose this is the case because it takes a certain undergraduate education to qualify to be a patent attorney. Such attorneys typically major in either engineering or science in college. The courses required for these majors are prerequisites to be allowed to sit for the Patent Bar exam. And you cannot be a patent attorney without passing the Patent Bar exam.
Why are patent attorneys limited to engineers and science majors? Well, because filling out patent applications, doing patent searches, and litigating patent disputes all involve technical jargon that engineers and science majors are comfortable with. Why am I telling you this? Because the instant book explains patent law and the patent system without all the technical jargon that would probably confuse you if you were not a patent attorney already. As a result, this book is a gold mine for business people, engineers, and project managers who must use patents as busienss assets and protect their value.
Patents can benefit a company - or they can adversely affect it. But regardless they are a business asset. And business assets must be managed through the use of INFORMED decisions. That's where this book comes in. It will help business managers responsible for patents to learn the strange nomenclature surrounding patents, and to understand the patent system so they can make informed decisions about their patents.
My favorite part of the book was the extensive use of BottomLine-Rule-Caveat references made throughout the text. And the stories used to make points were easy to follow and understand. 5 stars!
PS. Examine the Search Inside option Amazon provides so you can take a look at the Table of Contents which discloses exactly what is covered in this book.
I wish I've read it June 27, 2009 A. Nahir (Israel) I wish I've read this book before I've invested thousands of $ in patents.
This book is not for the details of how to write patents. For this read "Patent It Yourself, 13th Edition".
This book will, however, make you understand the business value of submitting a patent - or not submitting one.
My Fist Patent Primer September 18, 2009 Jack R. Braun The book was easy to read and included real-world examples. There did seem to be some repetition, but this served as a good review. I feel that I am ready to start the patent process.
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