Kenneth Avila, Esq. - Patents, Trademarks, and Business Law
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Important Considerations for a License Agreement

8/21/2017

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There are many considerations to take into account when licensing your intellectual property.  Adding to the complexity of the agreement is that each type of intellectual property, whether it be patents, trademarks, or copyrights, have different concerns and problems that you need to pay attention to.  For example with trademarks you will want to pay attention as to how your mark will be treated by the licensee.  How will they be displaying your mark?  What sort of training will they provide their employees?  However here are some general guidelines for you to consider when licensing your intellectual property.
  • Don't download and reuse a license agreement you found on the internet.  Although such an agreement may look great and cover everything it is not the agreement for you.  Each license has special needs and many factors to consider.  Reusing an existing license agreement and just changing the names will very likely cause you lots of heartache and worse a loss of rights.
  • Remember that in a licensing agreement you are giving someone the right to infringe on your intellectual property.  Make sure that in the terms of the agreement that the licensee will use the same level of care as you would use to protect your intellectual property.
  • Pay special attention to the terms in the agreement related to royalties, termination, confidentiality, and transferability.  Many times problems in these agreements are in these clauses.  Review them carefully and run them through as many scenarios as possible to find possible problems and weak points.
  • Many times when licensing one intellectual property you may be also licensing another.  For example, say that you are licensing a patent to a formula for paint and the agreement is to transfer the rights to the formula to a distributor so they may bring the paint to market.  What may also need to be transferred is any know how or trade secret as to the manufacture of the paint and it needs to be included in the agreement.
  • Consider who is to retain the rights to any improvements or derivatives in the intellectual property.  Say the intellectual property is a musical score and the licensee has modified the musical score.  Who owns the rights to the newly modified musical score?  What royalties will you, the licensor, have to the new musical score?
  • Success in these five areas will enable both you and your licensee to focus on what is really important about the agreement - allowing both of you to profit financially from the agreement.



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    • Home
    • Meet the Lawyer
    • Practice Areas
      • Business Law
      • Intellectual Property Law >
        • Patent FAQ and Fees
        • Trademark FAQ and Fees
        • Copyright FAQ and Fees
    • Resources
      • Blog
      • IP Twitter Feeds
      • IP Websites
    • Contact Me
    • Disclaimer