Idealog

IP strategy crucial to export success

New Zealand is an awesome place to develop your tech company, but many fail to fire abroad. AJ Park partner and patent attorney offers some insights as to why this can happen.

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FOR MANY NEW ZEALAND SMEs, the domestic market offers the right mix of opportunit­y and risk for business. It’s small enough to achieve a first mover advantage, it’s relatively easy to get a new product or service to market, and depending on the industry you’re in, it’s big enough to build a decent sized business.

But when it comes to exporting, only a few flourish on the internatio­nal stage. There are several reasons for this, not least access to capital and the inability to scale quickly or profitably. There’s another, less obvious reason, and that is the intellectu­al property environmen­t that exists here.

New Zealand ranks number 20 globally for number of patents filed, which generally means there is plenty of freedom to operate for many areas of technology – the patent thicket is not so thick. And because the patent portfolios of many internatio­nal companies do not extend to New Zealand, the risk of being sued for infringeme­nt when designing and commercial­ising technology here is vastly reduced.

However, what some New Zealand companies fail to realise is that freedom to operate here doesn’t mean freedom to operate elsewhere. In larger overseas markets, where patent filings are more prolific, there is a proportion­ately higher risk of infringing the IP rights of others.

Australia, for example, ranks at number 10 for patent filings globally. Nearly four times as many patents are filed there than in New Zealand. Further afield, in China and the United States, the numbers are even more staggering. In 2012, 652,777 patents were filed in China, and in the US it was 542,815. Very crudely, this means you are roughly 76 times more likely to be sued for patent infringeme­nt in the USA. This is of course a generalisa­tion – some industries are more prolific at filing patents and some countries receive more patents in some areas of technology than in others.

The point is that many New Zealand businesses fail to fire on all export cylinders because they don’t have freedom to operate in the markets they wish to enter or they haven’t got sufficient IP protection in place to protect their internatio­nal expansion from the ‘me-too’ companies out there.

Add in the sheer number of competitor­s in other countries and the lack of capital to be competitiv­e, and it’s easy to see how some New Zealand companies struggle to make inroads abroad.

If a Kiwi company copies your product or technology here at home, you might very well be able to resolve it over a chat and a beer. Repeat offenders soon get a bad reputation. Bad reputation­s are hard to shake in a small country like ours.

But that approach is unlikely to work overseas where the stakes are much higher and the competitio­n stronger.

Look closely enough and you’ll likely discover that our most successful exporters have robust IP protection in place for all their major markets. Sure, in some technology areas, patent protection is irrelevant. Short life cycle products such as certain software and smart phone apps fall into this category. But even with narrow IP protection and short life cycles, software and app patents can be incredibly valuable, particular­ly because of the mass market access that is available for products of this kind, and

In 2012, 652,777 patents were filed in China, and in the US it was 542,815. Very crudely, this means you are roughly 76 times more likely to be sued for patent

USA.” infringeme­nt in the USA.

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