Intellectual property licensing and value creation of culture industry

2011 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 827-844 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chih-Kai Chen
Author(s):  
Koichiro Anabuki ◽  
Haruhiko Kaneta ◽  
Kakuro Amasaka

In this paper, a patent value evaluation method, which is part of corporate strategy; namely, A-PPM (Amasakalabs ? Patent Performance Method), is proposed. Improvement in the patent value indicates value creation for the engineers work. Based on the keyword strategically competitive patent, 14 component factors necessary for patent value evaluation were defined in an effort to structure a patent evaluation method for qualitatively evaluating patents. Engineers, the intellectual property department, or chartered patent agents involved in the development of patents generally have different viewpoints about patent evaluation. Therefore, by conducting the evaluation separately in order to obtain a more detailed evaluation and then integrating these evaluation results, the creation of patents of higher value can be ensured. This way, the Patent Evaluation Method - A-PPM was established to innovate intellectual property functions and thereby enhance the competitiveness of corporate strategy. Its effectiveness has also been verified at a leading corporation.


2014 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 841-852 ◽  
Author(s):  
René Belderbos ◽  
Bruno Cassiman ◽  
Dries Faems ◽  
Bart Leten ◽  
Bart Van Looy

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 134-151
Author(s):  
Robert Laurella

In locating Wilkie Collins’s novel Armadale (1866) in the context of its two subsequent dramatic versions, this article considers how the Victorian culture industry contended with an aggressively expanding market economy. It positions Collins’s work amid an ongoing Victorian debate that was especially prevalent in literary and dramatic periodicals concerning the bifurcated development of English drama and novels. Highlighting how Collins flexibly adapted his writing for the stage in the face of legal, commercial, and artistic pressures strengthens emerging links between the ostensibly discrete fields of novelistic and theatrical writing. The adaptation of novels for the stage is one of the primary areas where developing intellectual property law collided with cultural production, opening up, for writers such as Collins, new avenues to write, produce, and entertain. This article aims to expand on recent studies of the evolving nature of copyright law in the nineteenth century by considering the forms of cultural production that context facilitated. Considering the legal context of these adaptations in concert with, however, and not as ancillary to or separate from, their social and political valences highlights the modes of production that arose despite – or perhaps as a result of – the opaque nature of Victorian intellectual property laws. Wilkie Collins the successful dramatist, as opposed to Wilkie Collins the novelist writing for the stage, emerged in his own right partly due to the copyright contests that initially encouraged him to adapt his novels in the first place.


2012 ◽  
Vol 09 (02) ◽  
pp. 1250009 ◽  
Author(s):  
IRFAAN KHOTA ◽  
LEON PRETORIUS

There is a staggering decline in the capitalization of intellectual property (IP) and low levels of investment in R&D, particularly with respect to emerging nations within the global IP environment, which limits accelerated industrial growth. In most emerging markets, this necessitates that management address multiple competencies better, that exploit organizational resources, knowledge, and management ability, to adapt faster than the competition. Our research offers a management model to address this management challenge strategically. This research also indicates that IP as a value creation mechanism is currently not a top management priority although investors increasingly look toward good IP management as an indicator of future organizational growth. The research presents the IP Scorecard, a further inductive development of Kaplan and Norton's traditional Balanced Scorecard. The IP Scorecard is a strategic management tool that enables management to drive a robust industrial growth strategy that is explicitly positioned within the knowledge economy, identifying target areas for organizational development around knowledge and IP management, in order to achieve the competitive higher-ground, by strategically creating and capitalizing on value arising from innovation and R&D activities. The IP Scorecard sensitizes management on where and how to carve out competitive turf, particularly from a knowledge and IP value creation perspective, seeking ultimately to enhance corporate/shareholder and product-life-cycle value. The paper encompasses limited field research findings on key IP-related strategic management considerations that promote leadership in innovation and R&D, across the product life cycle.


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