University IP & Technology Transfer Tactics

Technology Transfer Tactics and Patents Online, LLC today announced a strategic alliance, whereby the two firms are collaborating to offer a unique database of all patents held by major universities in the United States.

Visitors to the Technology Transfer Tactics website can view the current patent portfolio of each of 143 prominent U.S. universities, and with one mouse-click can see the entire patent portfolio of each institution.

Also, from that web page, users can initiate a patent search at www.freepatentsonline.com, which is said to be the most visited site in the world for patent information.

The Technology Transfer Tactics monthly newsletter provides in-depth guidance designed to streamline the commercialization process, as well as maximize the financial benefits of that process for universities and other research organizations.

“Technology Transfer Tactics is the pre-eminent periodical on amplifying and expediting the commercialization process for university IP,” said Erik Reeves, CEO of Patents Online, the company behind FreePatentsOnline. “We are very excited to be working with them to better expose the patent portfolios of all the key schools of higher learning across America. This will bring these universities more opportunities to increase licensing revenues.”

“Historically, the patent portfolios of companies and institutions have been only dimly visible,” said David Schwartz, CEO and Executive Editor of Technology Transfer Tactics. “Not only has FreePatentsOnline aggregated the largest audience in the world for patents and created unrivaled search capability, but they’re applying new ways of sorting and visualizing patent information to help accelerate the commercialization process.”

IP.com has a special interest in helping universities and research facilities manage their valuable patent portfolios. IP.com and the University of Oklahoma recently announced the launch of the InnovationQ Technology Transfer Workflow application for the University of Oklahoma's Intellectual Property Management Office. You can read more here about how OU is effectively managing its intellectual property assets with InnovationQ, and increasing patent licensing revenues.

Tweet of the Week @tomcolson

Tom Colson, CEO of IP.com, restated on Twitter @tomcolson a policy for public communications by employees in 140 characters permitted by Twitter for each tweet, as these postings are called by those who are following this emerging social interaction. Tom credits another lawyer, Jay Shepherd, @jayshep for the thoughtful and carefully drafted Twitter policy.

Our Twitter policy: Be professional, kind, discreet, authentic. Represent us well. Remember that you can’t control it once you hit “update.”

As noted by Tom in another tweet this week, he's not the first CEO to embrace Twitter as another effective way to communicate with those following similar interests in his work @ipdotcom and his other interests, which are outlined in his profile on Twitter. An increasing number of executives are now on Twitter. There's even a website called ExecTweets that aggregates their tweets.

Sun Microsystem's CEO, Jonathan Schwartz, has been blogging and twittering for well over a year. And this new policy for Twitter is really not new. It's simply a twitterable summary the Sun Guidelines on Public Discourse that Tom Colson adopted in his 2007 blog post about why we believe in business blogs. For all the same good reasons, we also believe in Twitter for business, and encourage employees of IP.com, if they're interested in social interaction on the internet, to join the conversation on Twitter, keeping in mind our policy, which is simply good advice for anyone.