Invention Help... Don't Get Scammed!
Invention help is available for a fee and a signed
contract to split the profits. An invention submission company
will take care of all the details.
The invention help expert will validate your invention through:
a. Internal project review or even new product feasibility
assessment.
b. Product manufacturability assessment.
c. New product market assessment.
d. Intellectual property assessment or even prototype assessment.
Once through these, the next steps might be license agreement,
patent management, manufacturing, marketing, distribution,
fulfillment, project funding / financing, licensing and product
development.
A caveat... Through media and web hype, many aspiring inventors
identify invention submission companies or invention promotion
companies as the best invention help. Not so. A number of
invention submission corporations belong to the $300 million a
year industry scam, according to MSNBC reports.
Stay updated. Read. Perform comprehensive research. Ask
questions. Do background checks. Consistently verify.
You may well require expert invention help to get your invention
from the drawing board to consumers at less cost. You may also
need expert invention help to know your invention's suitability.
Here are a few suggestions to get your invention help:
a. Get a patent lawyer.
Where? The USPTO, http://www.uspto.gov, United States Patent and
Trademark Office. It examines and issues patents, as well as,
examines and registers trademarks. The USPTO also brings a list
of area registered patent attorneys and agents.
b. Call the bar association of your city. It may have a list of
patent attorneys. A warning, carefully look through every
reference of a prospective patent lawyer. Check each of their
client roster and success percentage.
c. Keep abreast with the glossary of terms in filing for
patents. They will come useful when terms of services and
employment are discussed with the invention help.
d. Contact government advisory and private websites: