II.
The Initial Approach
Licensing deals
are generally done for inventions that are not yet protected by
issued patents. This complicates things because you need to get
a Confidentiality Agreement in place prior to disclosing the
details of your invention. Most corporate Confidentiality
Agreements are slanted horribly against the inventor. You will
want a customized agreement (see examples of Confidentiality
Agreements in the Appendix).
A fair
Confidentiality Agreement will prevent the corporation from
knocking you off (at least for a couple of years). Nonetheless,
a fair agreement will also tie the corporation’s hands. When
the corporation agrees to not knock you off, it is limiting its
ability to respond to competitors in the marketplace.
The corporation
knows that it licenses less than 1 in 1000 inventions that are
submitted to it. In other words the odds are great that the
effort a corporation spends on your invention will be wasted.
Writing and reviewing a custom agreement will require attention
from the overworked and stressed out legal department. For this
reason, in addition to unforeseen constraints in its product
development activities, corporations are very reluctant to
negotiate customized agreements.
Without
disclosing details, you must convince the corporation that your
invention is worth investing time and accepting constraints. How
do you do this? You perform a striptease. Show some leg.
Wiggle those hips. Bat some eyelashes. And keep the good stuff
covered.
In business
terms you talk about customer surveys, competitive advantage and
extraordinary profits. You talk about why end users love your
invention and how your invention will turn competitors into
dust.
If you have an
issued patent in hand you will do all of those same things and
then disclose the details published in your patent.
You’ll need an
advocate, someone within the corporation who knows the ropes and
will promote your cause before the powers that be. Not
surprisingly the best advocates are in marketing and sales.
They’re in the business of persuasion. People in marketing and
sales necessarily understand the needs and wants of customers.
For this reason their opinion carries a lot of weight with
managers when it comes to new products. By nature, marketing
and sales people are also open and friendly. They like to hear
and say, “Yes.” The easiest people to sell to are sales
people.
Engineers by
nature are cautious and good at finding reasons why things won’t
work. For reasons of ego and job security an engineer could
well be threatened by your invention.
Therefore, if
possible, start with someone in marketing or sales.
Meeting
marketing and sales people is easy at a trade show. They’re
everywhere. There’s no switchboard to filter you out on a trade
show floor. Just walk into a booth, find the product line that
comes closest to your invention and ask for the Product
Manager responsible for that product line. If the Product
Manager isn’t there start pitching your invention to the person
in front of you. They’ll probably find someone else for you to
talk to or tell you who to call at the home office – however,
you just might be speaking to a senior manager, or the
President. Regardless of whom you talk to, be polite and act
professionally.
Just being at a
trade show gives you an aura of professionalism. It is the best
place for making an initial approach.
If you are
referred to someone at the home office be sure to get the name
of the person who referred you. You will want to use that name
and refer to the trade show when you make your initial phone
call.
If you’re
making your approach by telephone and targeting a Fortune 500
corporation, you’re certain to into a brick wall disguised as a
friendly voice. The brick wall will explain (often by recorded
announcement) that you must submit your invention by mail
accompanied by a corporate Confidentiality Agreement (“at the
beep please leave your address and we’ll mail you the form”).
The Confidentiality Agreement will say that the corporation is
free to steal anything you submit, except, perhaps, an issued
patent. The brick wall is designed to kill inventions before
they reach the front door. It does this job remarkably well.
But don’t despair, behind the brick wall are people who want
great inventions, people who might act as your advocate. You
must simply find a way to get through or around the brick wall.
Every brick
wall has a door called the sales department. If you call in as
a potential customer you will be directed to a sales person. If
you call in as a big potential customer or as a potential
customer with a special request you will be directed to a
senior sales or marketing person. This is the person you
want.
Words That
Break Through the Brick Wall
To break
through the brick wall you must sound like you know what you’re
talking about. If you tell the switchboard operator, “I have an
invention…” you’ll be immediately transferred to the brick
wall. If you say, “I’d like to speak with the Product Manager
responsible for Newfangled Widgets,” the operator will transfer
you to the Newfangled Widgets department where another secretary
will probably answer and ask, “What is this regarding?” Here
again, if you mention the word, “invention” you’ll be
transferred to the brick wall. If you say, “I have a company
that’s looking into entering the Newfangled Widgets business and
I’m interested in the possibility of purchasing private label
widgets from you,” you are very likely to be transferred to the
person responsible for marketing and/or selling Newfangled
Widgets. (Marketing people
develop strategies and tools to support sales people who
make sales calls).
The term
“private label” is critical here. It means that you want the
company to make a product for you that you will sell with your
name on it. Private label deals are special and don’t fit into
normal day to day operations. Such deals can also be large.
The secretaries and lower level sales people you speak to won’t
be able to help you with “private label.” When you say “private
label” you’re pretty much guaranteed to reach someone high up
the food chain.
Are you lying?
Well… perhaps a little. On the other hand, if you are serious
about your invention then, as an alternative to licensing, you
should be considering getting into the business of
making and selling your invention yourself. And since your
invention is compatible with Newfangled Widgets, you just might
end up in the Newfangled Widgets business too. Checking into
the possibility of purchasing private label Newfangled
Widgets is a reasonable thing for an entrepreneur to do (and
that’s what you are).
Now then, what
happens when the senior manager answers the phone? You
introduce yourself and say something like, “My name is Mike
Marks, I have a small company entering the widgets business and
I’m interested in the possibility of buying private label New
Fangled widgets. I also have an invention that will
revolutionize the New Fangled widgets business and frankly, my
invention is probably a lot more interesting to you than any
quantity of widgets I might buy…” and you go on and perform a
striptease of words.
Once you get
through the brick wall you’ll be talking to someone who might be
an advocate (or who will direct you to an advocate). Your
initial goal is to get a Confidentiality Agreement in place so
that the corporation can review your invention in detail.
Going
Through Black & Decker’s Brick Wall
Although
WorkTools identified B&D as a prime target for licensing its
CounterPoint staple gun at the Hardware Show, the company didn’t
approach B&D until a few months afterwards. Regrettably,
WorkTools had failed to get the names and phone numbers of
contacts at the show. A contact name and phone number would
have enabled WorkTools to avoid the brick wall altogether.
Without a contact name WorkTools started the licensing process
cold.
I made a
call to B&D’s main switchboard and asked for the product manager
for staple guns. The operator inquired, “Regarding?” and I
replied that WorkTools had invented a staple gun that would
revolutionize the category. Mistake. I was transferred to the
person responsible for inventions and was told we would need to
sign a company disclosure agreement and submit our invention by
mail. “We can’t sign your agreement,” I explained, “I’m sure it
doesn’t protect us and our patents haven’t issued yet. We have
developed a new type of staple gun that will revolutionize the
staple gun business. It will grab 50% of the market and
generate at least fifty million in annual sales within three to
five years and could well generate over one hundred million in
annual sales. I know your marketing department needs a tool
like this. Could you please transfer me to the product manager
for staple guns.” “Mr. Marks,” the woman explained, “I’m sorry,
I can’t do that.” “Don’t you understand what I’m saying?” I
pleaded, “I’m talking seriously, without exaggeration, of
generating fifty to one hundred million dollars a year in
additional revenue for your company but there’s no way I can go
through your standard procedure. I need to talk to someone in
marketing.” It was useless. “I’m sorry, the only thing I can
do is send you out our submission agreement. It’s up to you,”
she said. I thanked her and hung up.
How could I
reach someone in marketing? Then it came to me. If I wanted to
buy staple guns my call would go through. If I wanted to
buy private label staple guns I wouldn’t get a low level
sales assistant, I would get someone with authority. Low level
people barely knew the term “private label”. “Private label”
sounded important and would surely get me kicked upstairs.
Two minutes
later I called the main switchboard again” “I’d like to speak
with the Product Manager for staple guns please.” “Regarding?”
asked the operator. “We’re interested in buying private label
staple guns.” Bingo. I was transferred to the Accessory
Division where another secretary answered. I repeated my
request, “Hello, my name is Mike Marks. My company is WorkTools,
Inc. I’d like to speak to the Product Manager for staple guns
regarding private label purchases. Bingo. I was transferred to
the Product Manager. Now it was time to pitch:
“Hello, my
name is Mike Marks. I have a small company called Worktools,
Inc. and we’re interested in possibly buying private label
staple guns from you. We’ve also developed a revolutionary
new staple gun that you might be interested in licensing from
us. Our new staple gun will grab a 50% share of the market and
put a crater in Saddlebrook, New Jersey (headquarters location
of Arrow Fastener, makers of the ArrowT-50, the leading staple
gun with a 75% market share). We’ve done preliminary surveys
with a prototype and 99% of the people we surveyed strongly
preferred our design to the Arrow T-50.”
“Interesting
you called,” came the reply. “We just set up a team to create a
new staple gun. The name of the team leader is Gary. You
should talk to him. I’ll transfer you.” Bingo again. I was
through the brick wall. The subject of private label never came
up again.
continue
to next section
top
© 2006,
Invention City, Inc. All rights reserved.