Modeling New Intellectual Property Value – Part I

March 8th, 2011

One of the challenges of valuing intellectual property that is yet to be commercialized is the concomitant lack of market data. A solution to this problem is not simply a matter of “widening the net” and using industry or sector-wide data as proxies because, by its very nature, intellectual property must be novel or unique. Consequently, a broader view assumes away the distinguishing characteristic of the asset we are trying to value in the first place. In this new series of posts, I explore one approach to the solution; based on the key attribute of IP and conceptually suitable to the determination of the potential value of newly introduced intellectual property assets.

Characteristic Life Cycle

Introducing new IP, whether it is a new technology or a new product, feature, or trademark, faces an initial period of slow growth because it must compete with the pre-existing allocation of resources in industry or the composition of consumer expenditures. At later stages, growth accelerates as the technical innovation and/or value proposition embedded in a new brand become known in the relevant market and compete successfully. Eventually market share start to stabilize, in part because there are few market segments left to conquer. Finally, a technology will become obsolete, and firms will need to continue their growth in areas, so that the diffusion of once-new intellectual property comes to a stop.

The overall characteristics of this life cycle derive from the economics of any market, where the competition for scarce resources is the central driver. In contrast to most tangible capital, intermediate, and consumer goods, the applicability of these principles to intellectual property is very close to the mathematical property assumed in most models, and also because the economic value of IP stems from the fact these assets only have potential value if they can be successfully commercialized. In particular, intellectual property can be applied with significant flexibility, re-deployed through appropriate contracts. More specifically, it constitutes a non-rival good, in the sense that the consumption of some of the good by one sector of the market does not physically preclude another from its use; it is only precluded contractually. For example, the fact that one factory has licensed a technological improvement does not leave any less of that technological innovation for application in other factories. A rival tangible good used in that same factory, like raw materials, fuel, machinery or land, does in fact reduce the availability of it for all other uses.

Consequently, not only is the economic value of new intellectual property going to vary along its life cycle, its overall value can change if deployed in new uses, industries, or markets with no significant added costs or trade-offs. Thus, one can only truly determine an estimate of potential value of IP, subject to certain assumptions about the (future) extent of its application.

Illustrative Model No. 1

It will be useful to consider first the case of a new trademark which will be maintained indefinitely. This will leave for more complex model the gradual or cliff-like obsolescence of technology, commercialized copyrights, or some of a trademark’s attributes.

030911_0522_ModelingNew1

The graph above illustrates the anticipated growth in value for a new trademark, starting from zero up to its full potential value. The initial growth rate is slower than the approach to the full potential. With the addition of specific risk characteristics, this curve can be valued at its net present value. However, there is no reason why this curve, or any one particular curve or path, should be assumed to be “average”, “expected”, or much less “unique”. A set of trademark value paths like the illustrated above can be anticipated under various scenarios, and each one will map to a different net present value. Trademark value will thus not be a function of a sales forecast, it will be what in mathematics is called a value functional. And this concepts requires a whole blog post.

Deceptive Advertising in the Age of Google: Damages Awarded

March 7th, 2011

Earlier in the year, one of the latest deceptive advertising cases dealing with the allegedly misleading use of competitors’ trademarks as keywords triggering AdWords advertisements on Google search results pages, ended with a rare win for the plaintiffs, a recovery of nearly $300,000 in damages, but no corrective advertising award. The case in question is Henry Binder, et al. v. Disability Group, Inc. (CV 07-2760 US District Court – Central District California), in which the where the Memorandum of Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law was filed on January 25, 2011.

Facts in the Case

The plaintiffs operate several related businesses under the “Binder & Binder” umbrella brand in the field of Social Security disability advocacy services in several states. Defendants operate a competing service and during 2006 used Plaintiffs’ the keyword “Binder and Binder” in an AdWords campaign.

Liability Conclusions

Judge King first concluded that Plaintiffs had valid ownership of the “Binder & Binder” and “Binder and Binder” trademarks, despite challenges to the chain of title of the federal registrations.

Applying the so-called Internet Trilogy of the Sleekcraft Factors (similarity of the marks; relatedness of products; simultaneous use of web-based marketing), the conclusion was a strong likelihood of confusion, supported by actual instances of confusion in the marketplace, and deceptive responses to potential customers’ responses to the ads.  Further review of the evidence, considering the claim of false advertising, the Judge concluded the Defendants were liable for this second federal claim and the (CA) state claim of unfair competition.

Damages Assessment

The analysis in this regard was based on the Plaintiffs’ retention rate of visitors clicking through their own advertising links (18.78%) applied to the number of clients captured on Defendants’ website via the clicks on the infringing ads during the eight–month damages period (188), and valued at the Plaintiffs’ average per-case revenue ($3,576.93).  Thus lost revenue was estimated at $125,192.55 (truncating the incremental cases to whole numbers).

To determine the damages that should be recovered, expert witness testimony was accepted supporting a 5% incremental cost attributable to the additional case load (35 cases), thus resulting in $118,932.92 in Lost Profits.

Following a similar logic, lost profits on a second website operated by the Defendants (absent similarly detailed information) were estimated at an additional $27,184.68 on 8 incremental cases.

No (prospective) corrective advertising damages were awarded since an amount based on an arbitrary percentage of Defendants’ advertising budget would not be sufficiently connected with actually correcting any mistaken perceptions created during the infringement period (nearly five years ago).

Finally, since the evidence and testimony presented regarding willfulness was clearly convincing, the Judge awarded enhanced damages by doubling the Lost Profits amount to $292,235.20 and awarding reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs.

Implications

In similar cases, a successful defense had been to point out that the use of certain terms as AdWord keywords did not qualify as their use as trademarks because these keywords are not designating the source of any specific goods or services.  The salient difference in this case is the willful deceptiveness of the ads posing, in effect, as Plaintiffs’ affiliates. Although the damages are not extraordinary, doubling damages should be a real deterrent for more impact-full infringements. The transient nature of search advertising, finally, is a significant factor against the conventional support for corrective advertising damages.