{"id":54131,"date":"2015-01-24T08:00:50","date_gmt":"2015-01-24T13:00:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ipwatchdog.com\/?p=54131"},"modified":"2023-01-17T10:49:28","modified_gmt":"2023-01-17T15:49:28","slug":"every-invention-starts-with-an-idea","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ipwatchdog.com\/2015\/01\/24\/every-invention-starts-with-an-idea\/id=54131\/","title":{"rendered":"Every invention starts with an idea"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"LightIndependent inventors frequently ask me the same or similar question \u2014 How much information do I have to include in a patent application?\u00a0 Sometimes this question is prefaced by something like\u2014 I have the concept but I am no scientist and I do not know how to actually create the invention. \u00a0Other times still it will be\u2014 I have this great idea, what do I do?<\/p>\n

The first thing to understand is that to be an inventor you need to have an invention, which means you need more than an idea. \u00a0I realize that flashy advertisements will sometimes lead people to think that they are an inventor when they have come up with an idea, and that vast riches will be bestowed for sharing the idea with the right person. But stop and think about it for a minute. If it were that easy why wouldn’t everyone be a rich inventor?<\/p>\n

The truth is you cannot patent or protect an idea<\/a> or a concept. \u00a0However, it is also\u00a0an undeniable truth that\u00a0all inventions start with an idea, but an idea is not something that can be protected by any form of intellectual property protection.\u00a0 Said another way, you simply cannot patent an idea or concept. \u00a0Similarly, you\u00a0cannot copyright<\/a> or trademark<\/a> an idea or concept. So what do you do when you have an idea? How much is required in order to have an invention?<\/p>\n

\"\"<\/a>In order to be an inventor the law requires that you contribute to the conception of at least a single patent claim<\/a> in a patent application<\/a>.\u00a0 This is one of the many places in patent law where the terms used complicate understanding.\u00a0 The “conception” spoken of in the requirement mentioned above is not merely an idea, but rather it is much more.\u00a0 The patent laws require that in order for someone to be an inventor they need to “dominate” the invention by exercising complete mental control over the subject matter of the invention, from creation through testing.\u00a0 Thus, the patent laws do make a distinction between what we would consider an idea or concept as those terms are used in everyday language and “conception,” which is a term of art that has a specific legal definition.<\/p>\n

So in order to be an inventor you must not only have the idea, but also you need to have the know-how with respect to bring the invention into being.\u00a0 Another unique twist is that you do not actually have to bring the invention into being, others can do that, but they must be acting on your directions and under your supervision.\u00a0 This is how the leader of a laboratory who does not actually do the testing winds up being the inventor.\u00a0 He or she will have the idea and then explain to those under them in the lab hierarchy what needs to be done.\u00a0 They will also be present to answer any questions that come up and provide additional direction as required. If the lab technician is merely following instructions they are not an inventor themselves; they are what the law refers to as a “reducer to practice.”<\/p>\n

So what if you have a great idea and you don’t know what to do?\u00a0 It is very difficult, if not impossible, to make any progress if all you have is the idea and no ability to move forward. \u00a0That means that the first thing\u00a0you need to do is embark on research to figure out as much as you can about the problem you are trying to solve and what will be required to solve that problem. \u00a0Learn as much as you can, tinker, sketch, read, because if you can describe your idea with enough detail<\/a> you will cross what I refer to as the idea\/invention boundary. Essentially, an idea is just a thought and an invention is the “meat on the bones,” so to speak. As you develop an idea more and more by adding detail after detail you are marching forward from having a “mere idea” that cannot be protected and toward an invention that can be protected. With an invention the devil really is in the details.<\/p>\n

Take for example the image at the top of this article. You notice a sketch of a light bulb, which is nearly complete and colored in. You can tell what the image is, and when you started reading this article you probably never gave it a second thought. But at some point in time the page was blank. Little by little the person drawing the image filled in the details, line by line, step by step. At some point in the process an observer would start to realize what is being drawn. It is at that moment that you have an identifiable light bulb, even before the sketch is complete and even before the coloring is added. Inventing is the same way. You do not need to be finished with the project in order to have something that could be a protectable invention. To analogize to the invention process, it\u00a0is at that moment when the image first comes into focus that you would have crossed over from having only a mere idea to having an invention. Sure, much more detail could be added, but enough has been added to present a concrete and tangible understanding to an observer. Thus, just as with drawing, inventing is a step by step process. As you add each additional detail you little by little create an invention.<\/p>\n

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Ultimately, you may get to a point where you just cannot go any further and need some additional help from an engineer, scientist or your friend next door, to move the project forward.\u00a0If you are at a point where you need help to move forward you should\u00a0write up as much as you can about your invention.\u00a0 The patent laws require that in order to file a patent application you need to be able to describe in writing how others could both make and use the invention<\/a>, with the same level of detail as would be required in an instruction manual.\u00a0 So write up as much as you can and then file\u00a0a provisional patent application<\/a>.\u00a0 Then you can move forward knowing that you have some documentation to demonstrate you were the creator of the invention. For more information about provisional patent applications please see:\u00a0<\/i><\/p>\n