Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Patenting Strategies for Small Businesses and Individual Inventors—Patentability Search Techniques on USPTO website

Before you spend money and time to apply for a patent, you should always do a patentability search to make sure that your technology has not been patented or published by others before.  For a patentability search, U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) website is a good place to start.

Here is the patent search website from USPTO: http://patft.uspto.gov/  You will notice that you will have to search Patent database and Patent Application database separately.  For each database, there are three search choices: Quick Search, Advanced Search, and Number search.  The following are the links you can follow for each type of search:


Patent
Patent Application
Quick Search

Advanced Search


Number Search




Number search is similar to a document fetch function.  If you know a patent number or patent application number, it’s a good place to go.  In Quick Search, you can use a simple combination of keywords and field codes to do a quick search.  The function is useful if you are doing a relatively narrow or targeted search.  For me, the most useful tool is the Advanced Search function, which provides you more flexibility to define what you are looking for.  You can use the following Field Codes to narrow your search. 

Field Code
Field Name

Field code
Field Name
PN
Patent number

IN
Inventor name
ISD
Issue date

IC
Inventor city
TTL
title

IS
Inventor state
ABST
abstract

ICN
Inventor Country
ACLM
Claims

LREP
Attorney or Agent
SPEC
Description/specification

AN
Assignee name
CCL
Current US Classification

AC
Assignee city
ICL
International Classification

AS
Assignee state
APN
Application serial Number

ACN
Assignee country
APD
Application date

EXP
Primary examiner
PARN
Parent case information

EXA
Assistant Examiner
RLAP
Related US App. Data

REF
Referenced by
REIS
Reissue Data

FREF
Foreign references
PRIR
Foreign priority

OREF
Other references
PCT
PCT information

GOVT
Government interest
APT
Application type





Here are some additional tips:
1.       by placing a field code outside a set of parentheses in complex Boolean queries, you can apply that field code to every keyword in the contained expression.  For example, ABST/(((Fire AND protection) AND (Building OR structure) ANDNOT sprinkler)
2.       Search for a phrase.  For example, ABST/”absorption spectroscopy”
3.       Limiting the range of years searched.  You can apply the ISD field code to a range of dates by using the -> operator. For example, ISD/1/1/2003 -> 12/31/2005 AND ABST/“absorption spectroscopy”
4.       Inventor name search: IN, followed by the name of the inventor, last name first, with the placement of a dash (-) between the last and first name and between the first name and the middle initial.  For example, search Dr. Robert L. Forward, IN/Forward-Robert-L
Your search should return a list of patents or patent applications each hyperlinked to a HTML text document.  Unfortunately, the HTML text document does not include figures, drawings, and chemical structures.  If you want to see the image of the patent document, you will need to click on the “image” button at the top of the page, which will take you to the scanned images.
Thanks for reading.
Connie

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