A Beginner's Guide To Writing Your Own Patent
A Beginner's Guide To Writing Your Own Patent, available at $39.99, has an average rating of 4.55, with 66 lectures, based on 38 reviews, and has 203 subscribers.
You will learn about How to write your patent in 20 hours with no experience This course is ideal for individuals who are Founders and inventors or Patent attorneys and agents or Students interested in patents It is particularly useful for Founders and inventors or Patent attorneys and agents or Students interested in patents.
Enroll now: A Beginner's Guide To Writing Your Own Patent
Summary
Title: A Beginner's Guide To Writing Your Own Patent
Price: $39.99
Average Rating: 4.55
Number of Lectures: 66
Number of Published Lectures: 66
Number of Curriculum Items: 66
Number of Published Curriculum Objects: 66
Original Price: $39.99
Quality Status: approved
Status: Live
What You Will Learn
- How to write your patent in 20 hours with no experience
Who Should Attend
- Founders and inventors
- Patent attorneys and agents
- Students interested in patents
Target Audiences
- Founders and inventors
- Patent attorneys and agents
- Students interested in patents
Testimonials
“Just wanted to drop a quick note that I bought your course and started it. It’s simply the best I’ve found and I’ve read a few books and listened to patent lawyers. You’re giving honest answers a startup needs to hear like how much a patent will actually sell for and how big you should be before it makes sense. I’ve never heard that from other patent lawyers -ever.”
– John L, Founder
“I am loving Jon’s course, this course is probably worth 10-20x the price! It’s helped me save HOURS and gave me confidence in my patent. The way that the course is broken down shows me a big picture view that just makes sense. After following along in the videos, I just loved how I’m able to focus on writing the patent.”
– Robert, Founder of real estate tech company
“Jon’s writing course was a gold-mine of patent trade secrets. His lessons are extremely clear, and I searched for so long on how to write a good patent, but it was very hard to find. These video lessons take a lot of time to go through, but hey, I avoided lawyers, so that’s a win.”
– Alex, Founder of AI tech company
“So thanks so much for making this! I have 100% confidence I can do a great provisional to go and market test with your course.”
– Matthew B, Founder of real estate company
Learn How To Write Patents The Smart Way
So you’d like a patent? Awesome. Owning a patent is one of the best ways to grow your business valuation, but the process can feel daunting. How do you even write patent language? How should you structure your patent? What concepts should you include? And after you get your patent, what can you do with it?
I’m going to help you cut through the confusion – to not only learn how to properly write a patent, but make sure it’s usable by your business in the future, too. Top law firms charge tens of thousands of dollars for this expertise.
In this course, I’ll walk you step-by-step through the entire process of writing a great patent.With high-quality videos (that aren’t too long) and examples along the way, you’ll write your patent in under 20 hours, so you can build and grow your business with confidence.
A Guide For The Inventor Who Wants To Have A Successful Business
The Zero to Patent course is the most practical, effective, and battle-tested course on writing patents ever created. Each of the 60+ lessons covers powerful techniques to write a strong patent.
Write your patent:
Apply battle-tested claim concepts. See why litigated Apple patents extracted $Billions from Samsung and learn how you can write a patent that does the same.
Learn the patent writing formula.Get a list of go-to words and structured templates for your draft. Patent writing is not like normal writing; the goal is to use simple, frequently-used words, not flowery language. Anyone can do it.
Then, watch as your patent achieves business results:
A patent grows your business valuation.
A patent makes your business more attractive for acquisition.
A patent prevents competitors from copying your idea.
A patent can be licensed or sold in a patent acquisition.
A patent bolsters your reputation as an innovator.
Plain and simple, this course will help you get the strongest patent while saving tens of thousands of dollars. Even if you don’t have much time. Even if you aren’t sure how to begin. And even if you already hired or are planning to hire a patent lawyer (use this course to quality-check a draft).
Here’s what you’ll get with this course:
Strategies:Learn my personal strategies, honed at the top patent law firm learning from the best where I spent thousands of hours and generated millions for the firm writing hundreds of patents.
Tutorials:This course includes walkthroughs of all parts of a patent application; best practices and pitfalls to avoid are all included.
Templates:Use spec, drawings, and claims templates for your next patent application. Just fill in the content and file!
Course Curriculum
Chapter 1: Introduction
Lecture 1: About me
Lecture 2: No attorney-client privilege
Lecture 3: Writing a patent is only step 1
Lecture 4: Course structure; is 20 hours enough?
Lecture 5: Writing your first patent is exciting, and you'll have questions!
Chapter 2: Patents 101
Lecture 1: What is a patent?
Lecture 2: Patent Timelines and Public Disclosures
Lecture 3: Should you file a provisional or non-provisional patent?
Lecture 4: Patent Costs
Lecture 5: Patent Territories
Lecture 6: Most likely outcomes for patents
Lecture 7: Should you get a patent?
Lecture 8: How many patents should you get?
Chapter 3: Pre-drafting Strategy – spend up to 2 hours here
Lecture 1: Patent searches
Lecture 2: Intro to claims
Lecture 3: Why claim scope is the most important thing to get right, e.g., Apple v. Samsung
Lecture 4: Patent writing order
Lecture 5: Single or multiple ideas in a patent?
Lecture 6: Templates
Chapter 4: Claims – spend up to 7 hours here
Lecture 1: High level concepts
Lecture 2: Writing your first claim set
Lecture 3: Claim interpretation
Lecture 4: Claim drafting perspective
Lecture 5: 35 USC 101
Lecture 6: 35 USC 112
Lecture 7: 35 USC 102 and 35 USC 103
Lecture 8: Avoid unnecessary limitations
Lecture 9: Preamble
Lecture 10: "comprising"
Lecture 11: "wherein"; "based on"; "configured to"
Lecture 12: if-branches
Lecture 13: "plurality"; "one or more"
Lecture 14: Use of "first" and "second"
Lecture 15: "in response to"
Lecture 16: Using "a", "an" vs. "the"
Lecture 17: "and" vs. "or"
Lecture 18: Tying elements together
Lecture 19: Claim mirroring
Chapter 5: Drawings – spend up to 4 hours here
Lecture 1: High level concepts
Lecture 2: Formal requirements
Lecture 3: Use fictional names, faces, and brands
Lecture 4: Claim drawing
Lecture 5: EXAMPLE – Coming up with a claimset and drawings; setting up the specification
Chapter 6: Title, Abstract, Summary, Description – spend up to 7 hours here
Lecture 1: Time Distribution
Lecture 2: Key Concepts
Lecture 3: Title
Lecture 4: Background
Lecture 5: Abstract
Lecture 6: Summary
Lecture 7: Drawings
Lecture 8: Detailed Description – First 10 minutes
Lecture 9: Detailed Description – Maintain term consistency
Lecture 10: Detailed Description – How to write a paragraph
Lecture 11: Detailed Description – Write from a machine's perspective
Lecture 12: Detailed Description – Numbering
Lecture 13: Detailed Description – "For example" and "In some implementations"
Lecture 14: Detailed Description -"X will be described further below in reference to FIG. Y"
Lecture 15: EXAMPLE – Finalizing your patent
Chapter 7: Next Steps
Lecture 1: Finalize patent application
Lecture 2: Patent filing requirements
Lecture 3: Information Disclosure Statements
Lecture 4: Check micro-entity or small-entity status!
Lecture 5: Non-publication requests
Lecture 6: When to bring in a patent attorney
Lecture 7: File the patent online
Lecture 8: Conclusion
Instructors
-
Jon Liu
Patent Lawyer
Rating Distribution
- 1 stars: 0 votes
- 2 stars: 0 votes
- 3 stars: 2 votes
- 4 stars: 14 votes
- 5 stars: 22 votes
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do I have access to the course materials?
You can view and review the lecture materials indefinitely, like an on-demand channel.
Can I take my courses with me wherever I go?
Definitely! If you have an internet connection, courses on Udemy are available on any device at any time. If you don’t have an internet connection, some instructors also let their students download course lectures. That’s up to the instructor though, so make sure you get on their good side!
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