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Patent Information » Patent Search

What is a Patent Search and How Do I Get Started Searching?

A patent search will be performed by an examiner when your patent application is received by the USPTO.  But since filing a patent requires quite a bit of time and a decent amount of money, you should do your own patent search first and determine what's out there before you file your patent application. 


Patent Research

Before you spend any money at all applying for a patent, reducing your invention to practice or building an expensive prototype, you can start searching around all on your own.

Thanks to the internet, it is fairly simple to get started on your own patent search.  The USPTO has a very detailed website with patent searching capabilities. Best of all, it is free.  That is the number one place to begin your quest in determining if your invention is novel.  The USPTO's website makes it simple to check out issued patents between now and 1976.  You may access older patents from their archives, but depending on the nature of your invention, you may not need to look that far back (technology has its limits you know!). 

You may begin doing a very preliminary patent search by writing down all the words you can think of that describe your invention.  You would then want to perform a keyword search using the USPTO's database.

Remember that you need to consider patents disclosing inventions that might not be just like yours, but are similar to yours. You should note all these and then study them. Check through the existing patents and take notes of the most relevant ones. You should even print these out and begin building a stack of relevant prior art.

By studying existing and similar patents you may learn many important facts in addition to determining whether your invention is new or not. These facts might include other potential uses for your product, you may find potential licensees or assignees (people who may buy the rights to your invention from you), and find other product features.  You can also study the background sections and the data that others with similar inventions included in their patents. This can help you find references that relate to your invention without having to look everywhere all on your own to find it.  All this will help you make the process easier, help you to create a more unique invention and give you a competitive edge in the marketplace.

From here, you have a few options. You still have a lot of unturned stones out there and should search further before filing a patent application.  You still need to find existing publications or anything else that could bar your invention from gaining a patent.

There are many more online patent search engines you may use when conducting your patent search. And patent search firms are available to perform your patent search if you would like to hire the job out.

 

 

 
 

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