What Would You Do? with Maria Boicova-Wynants
Your IP lawyer wants you to file. Sometimes that is the worst thing you can do. Not because patents are bad. Because filing early on an unvalidated assumption builds a legal structure to defend a hypothesis the market hasn't voted on yet. Six months of work. Broad claims. Big spend. You launch. Customers want something adjacent. Now you have patents. On the wrong thing. But the reverse can likewise backfire! Since the other trap is the mirror image. You wait, test, learn. Your own demo becomes prior art. Or a competitor files first. The question is not "protect first or move first." It is: what do you protect, when, in what form, and to what end? Four moves I would do instead, in order: 1. Map every planned disclosure before anything else. Investor meetings, pilots, talks, launches. 2. Separate timing from scope. Timing is a legal question. Scope is a business one. Stop collapsing them. 3. Segment the portfolio. Trade secrets, design rights, copyright, trademarks. Not everything valuable is patentable. Not everything patentable is worth patenting. 4. Anchor protection to business milestones, with legal deadlines built in. The companies that fall into the "protect everything" trap take IP the most seriously. Caution without precision starts to look like rigor. It functions like paralysis. A beautifully structured portfolio and a product six months behind - that is IP as a cage, not a tool. And this is precisely what Episode 3 of What Would You Do? is all about. Think clearly. Decide better.
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