Patent Pending Made Simple

Are you curious about what the patent process looks like from start to finish? What happens after you file your patent application? What deadlines and expectations should you have? Join us on on this episode of Patent Pending Made Simple as Jamie and Samar walk you through the lifecycle of a patent.
Visit our show notes page for a transcript and resources: https://outlierpatentattorneys.com/patent-pending-made-simple/podcast/episodes/2
Topics we cover:
• The provisional application is an informal application that acts as a placeholder to secure an early filing date. It gives inventors up to 1 year to decide if they want to pursue a full patent application.
• Within 1 year of filing the provisional, inventors must file a non-provisional or PCT application to claim priority to the provisional filing date.
• After filing a non-provisional application, the patent office will typically issue a rejection within 18-24 months. This is a normal part of the patent prosecution process.
• Inventors can respond to rejections, amend claims, and make arguments to try and overcome the rejections. This can go back and forth multiple times until the application is either abandoned or allowed.
• International filings via the PCT route can allow inventors to enter national phase in countries like Europe and Canada. However, international filings are expensive and the US is often the most lucrative market.

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Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/patentpending/message

Show Notes

Are you curious about what the patent process looks like from start to finish? What happens after you file your patent application? What deadlines and expectations should you have? Join us on on this episode of Patent Pending Made Simple as Jamie and Samar walk you through the lifecycle of a patent.

Visit our show notes page for a transcript and resources: https://outlierpatentattorneys.com/patent-pending-made-simple/podcast/episodes/2

Topics we cover:

• The provisional application is an informal application that acts as a placeholder to secure an early filing date. It gives inventors up to 1 year to decide if they want to pursue a full patent application.

• Within 1 year of filing the provisional, inventors must file a non-provisional or PCT application to claim priority to the provisional filing date.

• After filing a non-provisional application, the patent office will typically issue a rejection within 18-24 months. This is a normal part of the patent prosecution process.

• Inventors can respond to rejections, amend claims, and make arguments to try and overcome the rejections. This can go back and forth multiple times until the application is either abandoned or allowed.

• International filings via the PCT route can allow inventors to enter national phase in countries like Europe and Canada. However, international filings are expensive and the US is often the most lucrative market.

--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/patentpending/message

What is Patent Pending Made Simple?

Patent Pending Made Simple is a podcast for inventors who are looking to learn more about the patent process