Return on Investment from Your Patent Portfolio
Your CEO: “Why are we spending so much on patents?” Your CFO: “Do we have a financial model for this spend?” The path forward isn’t clear. Now what? In this case study, we explore how we helped a high-technology, startup client model the value of their patent portfolio and patent strategy.
Patents provide value in different ways depending on how you use them
In one of our previous articles, we discussed how patents generate value for companies in several different ways. In this particular case, our client had been running a patent program for a few years and had built a patent portfolio for defensive purposes. Their goal had been to mitigate the risk of patent assertion from large companies in, and outside, of their ecosystem, see Figure 1.
The costs of the program were increasing, and the executives wanted a deeper understanding of the financial underpinnings of the patent strategy. The program costs were relatively easy to calculate. But calculating the expected return, or value, of the strategy and portfolio, was more of a challenge. We helped the client to assess the risk from their ecosystem and to model and value their current patent portfolio and patent strategy. In the end, the client used the model and the strategy to better articulate the value of their program and helped the organization unite around the company’s patent strategy.
Our client had built their patent program primarily around a counter-assertion strategy, and their intended use of their patents was mainly for defensive purposes. Therefore, we focused on modeling the value of patent risk mitigation through counter-assertion. Note: we did not try to model the sources of value from the patent portfolio.
How do you assess your patent risk?
First, we needed to better understand our client’s patent risk. The client was vulnerable to patents of operating companies within their ecosystem, large corporate asserters outside of it, and NPEs. Their patent strategy focused on mitigating the bigger risks. Figures 2 and 3 illustrate the basis for analyzing and mitigating patent risks.
In the case that our client didn’t have any patents to use for counter-assertion, we estimated that they would have to pay $100 million in royalties if OpCo1 were to assert their patents. The probability of an assertion was estimated at 5%, resulting in an expected risk of ($100 million x 5%) $5 million. We expected a dispute with OpCo1 to take place five years down the road, so we had to discount the expected risk to get to a present value. When we did that, we got a present value of $3 million for the patent risk from OpCo1. If OpCo1 were to/decided to assert their patents against our client, we assumed that our client’s patent portfolio could be used for counter-assertion and that it would reduce the expected payment by 75%. That 75% translated into expected savings of $2.6 million due to our client’s patent portfolio. The same calculation was repeated for all the high-risk companies we had identified in the previous phase (OpCo 1-9).
The expected savings totaled $22.6 million, and we added a total of $9.5 million for other risk reduction from Ecosystem Players and General Deterrence. Now the client had a number to reflect the value of their patent portfolio based on its use for counter-assertion.
Using a model that examined both patent risk and expected reduction from the patent program and portfolio allowed the client’s IP department to generate a number that showed the value of their efforts. In turn, this enabled the executive team to grasp the return on investment (ROI) of the patent strategy. Our client now had a tool to use for making decisions on how to mitigate patent risk and where to spend money to build their patent portfolio.
Conclusion
All high-technology startups have patent risk, and they should assess that risk to gain insight into what strategies might provide them with the best-expected return from their patent strategy. Creating a model to articulate the value of your strategy will support your decision-making and help you communicate the value of different strategic options internally. It may also provide clearer guidance as to what kind of ROI your patent team is generating.