When working with a law firm, you look for a team of dedicated professionals who can guarantee timely and thorough patent prosecution. While there are qualitative measures that come into play – the length and health of an established relationship, communication and transparency, cost of the firm, or size of the team, for example – the most valuable consideration is their success rate at the USPTO.
At a time when companies want more data factored into business decisions, IP departments can use patent analytics to dive deeper into the track record of their current outside counsel. IP leaders at Western Digital, for example, are using Juristat to build a more formal review process. “We want to become more deliberate,” says David Dutcher, Chief Patent Counsel at Western Digital. “We’re developing a process to analyze and review our existing counsel, and terminate relationships where the performance has been sub-par.”
Ready to do the same at your company? Read our tips on how to get started with your review and which metrics matter the most.
We recommend limiting your review to the past few years of application data. The last five years are more telling of future success than the previous ten, so limit your scope for a more relevant overview.
You know your company best, so limit your review to applications in relevant technology centers or USPC classes. By segmenting your search, you can compare outside counsel based on their performance for similar applications, ranking the legal teams who can best support your company’s most critical innovations. Then you can funnel future applications to the teams that have a higher chance of victory at the USPTO.
Now that you've got a set of relevant apps to give you benchmark data, you can see where your current outside counsel's performance excels, and where it is subpar. But which metrics are the best indicators of success?
The allowance rate is a good indicator of success, but that alone does not account for how long a prosecution can take, or how much it will cost, or even the overall patent quality and coverage of the final application. It’s important to go beyond the allowance rate in your review. Here are a few other metrics you can use to evaluate firm performance:
By looking at each of these metrics, IP teams can identify the strengths and weaknesses of current legal partners when compared to either in-house prosecution or new firms vying for business. Curious to see how the IP leaders at Western Digital uses Juristat to evaluate their outside counsel? Check out the case study here.
Related: Hoping to learn more about how in-house teams use Juristat? Watch our Master Class: Best Practices for In-House Teams.