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Provisional Patent Application

Protect Your Idea - Step 3

Overview
Types of Patents
Search Patents
Protect Your Idea
Filing the Application

"This product is patent pending"

Generally, it is not good business to make the idea public in any way until the item gains patent-pending status. Not only can someone steal an unprotected idea with impunity, but an inventor or company that allows another person to gain knowledge of the idea may instantly lose all international patent rights while at the same time, start the clock toward losing U.S. patent rights as well. The key to marketing, selling, and doing virtually anything with an idea is to achieve patent-pending status.

File an application: Any idea that is deemed patentable becomes patent pending the instant a patent application is filed with a government patent office. From the moment the application is received by the government, an inventor or assigned corporation may do whatever they wish with the idea, including sell it to another person or make money off of that item.

Provisional patent application: In order to apply for a patent, individuals and corporations with a functional idea must submit a utility patent application. As soon as the utility application is filed, the idea is patent pending. From there, these groups must wait until the patent office begins the examination process. However, another option is to file a provisional patent application. The provisional application is typically a watered-down utility application that is devoid of the claims section that is instrumental in the utility applications. The provisional is a relatively new option that is unique to the U.S. and is often less costly to craft and file. However, the purpose of the provisional is to buy an inventor or assigned corporation one-year of patent-pending status. Before that year is up, the applicant must upgrade the provisional into a traditional utility patent application. Before Greenberg & Lieberman, LLC can file a Provisional patent application for you or your company you must be able to provide us sufficient information about your invention so some one else who is skilled in the art (the subject matter which your idea is based) can create your invention.

Provisional vs. utility: Applicants generally file provisionals when they expect to tweak the idea within that year, want to be filed quickly, desire a lower cost filing option while they secure investor financing, or merely want to see if there is a viable market for the idea. However, the caveat once again is that a patent will never be granted out of a provisional application. It is a temporary item for one-year of patent pending status. Only a utility application will be examined in terms of functional ideas.

Design patents: Just as with functional ideas, design patent applications also achieve patent-pending status from the moment the application is filed.

Why you should use an attorney: The use of a patent attorney to file your patent is not required. However, you will see on almost every page of the United States patent and trademark office that you should use a lawyer. The reason you should use an attorney is at least two fold. From the patent office's point of view a patent application that is filed correctly is a lot less work for patent examiners to prosecute (prosecution is what the patent application process is called). From the applicant's (your) point of view, a patent attorney will not only be able to file your patent with the correct forms, but he or she presumably knows the system and will be able to write your patent application in a fashion that will give you both the best chance for success and to try to obtain the broadest claims. You want broad claims (legally operative language that define your patent) for your patent as this will allow you to prevent the largest number of competitors from coming our with products similar to yours.

The attorneys at Greenberg & Lieberman have filed hundreds of patents which have issued (granted). Please read some of these patents. Michael Greenberg is our registered patent lawyer. However patent prosecution is not the only area of patent law Greenberg & Lieberman practices. We also provide counseling and litigation services when necessary

Go to Step 4
File your patent application(s), track application
progress and keep you informed.

 

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