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Could Trade Marks be Better than Patents as Future Innovation Predictors?

Dawn Ellmore Employment - The history of the UK trade mark - Dawn Ellmore Employment

The history of the UK trade mark - Dawn Ellmore Employment Blog

A new study (entitled “Innovation Worth Buying: The Fair-Value of Innovation Benchmarks and Proxies”) by two assistant Professors of Accountancy at the George Washington University, James Potepa and Kyle T. Welch has benchmarked the most common measures of outputs and outcomes of innovation (including patent count, citation-weighted patent count, R&D expenditure, trade mark count and market response to new patents).

The report authors have reportedly concluded that the size of a company’s trade mark portfolio rather than either patent count or R&D expenditure is a more consistent indicator of innovation with trade marks being positively and significantly associated with innovation.  Although this conclusion may be surprising the authors explain their findings as follows:

Source: http://buff.ly/2uJ3fR1

 

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Could Trade Marks be Better than Patents as Future Innovation Predictors?
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A new study (entitled “Innovation Worth Buying: The Fair-Value of Innovation Benchmarks and Proxies”) by two assistant Professors of Accountancy at the George Washington University, James Potepa and Kyle T. Welch has benchmarked the most common measures of outputs and outcomes of innovation (including patent count, citation-weighted patent count, R&D expenditure, trade mark count and market response to new patents).
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Dawn Ellmore Employment
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