VII. Marriage
A licensing deal is like a
marriage. The courtship is filled with promises and there’s a
honeymoon period after the deal is signed. Everyone is happy that
the deal is done and looks forward to success and prosperity in
the years to come. Alas, a licensing deal is like a marriage… and
even the best marriages have disappointments.
No matter how good your deal is, no matter how diligent and
hardworking the licensee, you will likely see ways that more could
be done. I guarantee that if you grant a worldwide license to a
US company that you’ll be disappointed with sales results outside
of the US – if you’re dealing with a large corporation you’ll
probably need to grin and bear it and take comfort in the fact
that the US is the world’s best market by far. If the company is
relatively small you might retain rights outside of the US for
licensing to non-US companies.
Good marriages require work from both parties. Once you get
married you must continue paying attention to your spouse
otherwise the relationship will sour. Licensing deals are
similar. When you sign your deal the licensee sees the value of
your invention and has no conceptual problem with paying your
royalty. As time goes on the licensee tends to forget where the
invention came from. Maybe people left the company or perhaps the
company sold its rights to your invention to another company.
Either way, at some point in the future, it’s virtually certain
that someone who doesn’t know you will review the profitability of
the product line that is based on your invention. This person
will see an expense for “Royalty” and will invariably think, “We
could immediately increase profitability by x% if we stopped
paying this Royalty.” If you have maintained active contacts at
the licensee and have continued to contribute to the program you
will have internal champions who will defend you on both moral and
business grounds. The problem should be nipped in the bud. But
if no one knows you or cares about you then there’s a half decent
chance that the licensee will start looking for ways to get around
the licensing deal it signed with you.
All the warm fuzzies you had with the original negotiating team
mean nothing. Throughout the term of your licensing agreement
you should stay in regular contact with both the product manager
assigned to your invention/product and the person who calculates
your Royalty. When you call or email the product manager you
should have something useful to share. Product improvements are
an obvious thing to offer (Don’t push these too fast. It takes
time for a company to digest the original invention). Also
useful is information you gather from visiting local stores. If
you’re in a different part of the country than the product manager
this can be very useful information:
· Is
your invention/product well displayed or is it gathering dust?
· Is
the quality of the manufactured product good or does it need
improvement?
· How
fast is it selling (keep a count from week to week)?
· Do
retail clerks know your product? What do they say about it?
· What
are competitors doing? Prices? Product introductions?
The person who calculates
your royalty should be thanked at least once a year with a
thoughtful but inexpensive Christmas gift (if this is allowed). A
$50 fruit basket or gourmet popcorn is probably right for most
circumstances. The product manager should get an equivalent
thoughtful gift. If you’re dealing with a small company then the
product manager could well be the President. In that case either
no gift or something nicer (ie more expensive) than what you give
the bookkeeper would be appropriate.
The Black & Decker
Marriage
Once the licensing
agreement was signed B&D pretty much cut WorkTools out of the
development process. B&D didn’t fully understand the design and
without WorkTools’ input the quality of the final product
suffered. Nonetheless, when Black & Decker launched the PowerShot®
staple gun there was a lot of excitement. The Industrial Design
Society of America (IDSA) and Business Week gave PowerShot® a Gold
Award for innovation and good design. An editor at Fine
Homebuilding compared it to the compact disc and radial tires.
B&D featured it prominently in its 1993 Annual Report. Despite
all of the good press WorkTools felt it was only the tip of the
iceberg and that much, much more could be done. WorkTools even
offered to do PR on B&D’s behalf at no charge. But B&D was unable
to accept WorkTools suggestions and help at that time.
Sales were good. But there were problems with quality. B&D’s
attention began to drift. Over the course of three years there
were four different product managers. Mike became B&D’s
unofficial staple gun consultant and helped to educate each new
product manager about the stapling business in general and
PowerShot® in particular. To help with quality problems Joel
offered design suggestions and even built a prototype assembly
machine to enable faster, higher quality assembly operations.
WorkTools’ assistance changed nothing.
In time it became clear to WorkTools that B&D was doing little to
build the PowerShot® business and that there was a chance the
business might die. Mike told Joel and Brad, “B&D needs to do
some line extensions. There should be a full line of forward
acting staple guns.” Brad asked, “How do we get them to do that?
We’re just three guys and they’re B&D.” Mike replied, “We’ll make
them an offer they’d be stupid to refuse. We’ll offer to develop
line extensions at no cost to B&D, including manufacturing
tooling. All they’ll need to do is set the standards for quality
and make a commitment to buy a reasonable quantity if we meet
those standards. We’ll rope in some manufacturers who will be
glad to invest in the chance to be a supplier to B&D.” So Mike
called the B&D product manager and proposed exactly that. And the
product manager spoke to his manager who said, “That’s a great
idea. Could they do a DeWalt version too?”
The DeWalt brand was the biggest jewel in B&D’s crown of
products. Designing a staple gun for the DeWalt brand name was
serious and WorkTools’ recognized that outside help would be
needed. WorkTools called SG Hauser, a top level design firm and
waved the B&D name. Hauser jumped at the chance to have B&D as a
client and agreed to work on spec. WorkTools also contacted a
Taiwan manufacturer to make a light duty staple gun and a US
manufacturer for the DeWalt staple gun. The Tawianese factory was
already making staple guns and the US manufacturer was a supplier
of parts for the PowerShot staple gun. Everyone came on board.
The DeWalt staple gun was
ready in record time. But before it was launched B&D’s Accessory
Division (the division responsible for staple guns) had a
management change. The new management said, “We don’t want a
DeWalt branded staple gun. That brand name is for power tools.
In fact we don’t want to be in the staple gun business at all.”
WorkTools had some language in its licensing agreement that gave
it a say in who B&D sold the business to. The business was sold
to a start-up called PowerShot Tool Co., headed by a former B&D
product manager named Sean Quinn. Sean launched the line
extensions (without the DeWalt name) and achieved great success.
The success was great enough that PowerShot’s major competitor,
Arrow, took notice and ended up buying the company. WorkTools now
receives its royalty checks from Arrow.
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Invention City, Inc. All rights reserved.