Watch For IP Leaks From Publications

Over the years I've written dozens of technical articles, blogs, and marketing literature.  Most of what I wrote was reviewed by marketing, engineering, and perhaps sales. My articles have been examined for their ability to carry the corporate message, technical accuracy, and how the pieces positioned products. No one ever brought up the issue of intellectual property. This is not something unique to my experience. Companies worry about the content and form of publications but not the IP that might be revealed in them. When someone does catch some important IP heading out the door it is often by happenstance. It's not so much that companies don't care.

If you bring up the subject of "IP in publications" most companies will sincerely tell you that they are worried about it. Yet despite that, examining publications for IP is not always part of the normal publication review process. On the flip side are the companies that are paranoid about IP in publications. For many, the knee jerk reaction is "publish nothing!" This doesn't work for long since publications are a major part of corporate communications. Are you going to tell scientists that they can't publish a scientific paper? They won't work for you. Just try and shut up an engineer with a good idea for an article. You'll only infuriate him. Marketing has to publish white papers and sales literature so you can't stop them from producing publications. 

The simple solution is a publication clearance process, implemented as a workflow. The process of Publication Clearance pushes the document in front of everyone who should see it including legal counsel, patent counsel, technical and marketing. Publication clearance within InnovationQ also protects the document as intellectual property. It is subjected to the same LegalSafeguarding process as documents in the Trade Secret Management modules. We can even build hooks into docketing or our Trade Secret Management modules to help better identify IP contained in publications before it is too late.

Adopting a publication clearance process is a good first step toward protecting important intellectual property. Having tools to automate this process makes it much easier to live with.
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