Law.com Subscribers SAVE 30%

Call 855-808-4530 or email [email protected] to receive your discount on a new subscription.

Features

Have Your Story Straight Before the Reporter Calls

John Tuerck

There is acute tension between the do-it-now mindset of media-savvy PR pros and the generally cautious nature of lawyers. Eliminating the tension completely is impossible, even inadvisable. After all, the client's interests are sacrosanct, and overlooking those interests to get some quick press courts disaster. You can alleviate the tension, however, by taking steps to ensure a smooth process before you get that 3 o'clock call.

Building and Sustaining a Marketing and Sales Culture at Your Law Firm

John Remsen, Jr.

Getting lawyers and law firms do things differently is not an easy task and instilling a marketing mindset among lawyers is a major effort for most firms, resembling the proverbial challenge of "herding cats." <br>However, the most profitable firms are moving closer to a corporate model of governance, with institutional goals, strong leadership and streamlined governance. They are also starting to embrace marketing, recognizing the need to get closer to existing clients and invest time and resources on focused, proactive strategies to go after new ones.

Features

Event Strategy: Ensuring Maximum ROI

Olivia Fox Cabane

You probably have much less time than you wish you had to "do your networking", so you might as well make the most of it. To ensure maximum return on investment for each event you attend, you'll need to carefully decide which events to attend, how to prepare for them, whom to go with, how to approach people and even what to wear.

News Briefs

Mark Abell & Victoria Ford

Highlights of the latest franchising news from around the country.

Features

Court Watch

Darryl A. Hart, Charles G. Miller, & Griffith C. Towle

Highlights of the latest franchising cases from around the country.

Should You Make an Earnings Claim?

Lee R. Dickinson

If there is one question in the minds and on the lips of potential franchisees, it is "How much money can I make with this concept?" Franchisors may answer this question, of course, but with great care and consideration as to what, how, and when they answer it.

Features

Tax Nexus Update for Franchisors

Bruce S. Schaeffer

Franchisors thinking of expanding into new jurisdictions, and even those that are not changing anything, should be wary. State and local governments, in this time of deficits, are constantly looking for ways to increase their revenues by broadening the scope of their taxes.

Pros and Cons of Drafting Patent Applications in India

Jonathan P. Osha

A call center in New Delhi, India, fields questions from a utility customer in a small town in Pennsylvania. An accounting firm in Mumbai, India, provides back-office services for a growing Texas company. An IT company in Perumbavoor, India, provides Internet support to a manufacturer of amplifiers in Washington state.

Technology Potency: Patent Citation Refinements for Merger and Acquisition or Joint Venture Analysis

Erin-Michael Gill

The real value of a possible acquisition or joint venture partner is often in the potential of their next invention. As advisers, patent managers, and intellectual asset strategists, it is critical that the methodology and tools used for assessing patent quality accurately reflect a would-be ally's technological potency.

Getting to Know Means-Plus-Function Claims: Does 'Means' Always Mean 'Means'?

Paul A. Ragusa & Noera Ayaz

Means-plus-function claims are a controversial part of claim drafting. On one hand, patent practitioners face the dilemma of whether or not to use such claims in an application, as they may narrow the scope of the patent protection through their dependence on what is described in the specification. On the other hand, such claims may be a complete, simple and elegant way to claim an invention that uses various types of a certain limitation, as in the software field. If a patent practitioner does decide to use means-plus-function claims, he or she should be aware that using the term "means" does not always mean that the claim is a means-plus-function claim. Likewise, the lack of the term "means" does not always mean that a claim is not in means-plus-function form, as exemplified in the recent case law discussed below.

Need Help?

  1. Prefer an IP authenticated environment? Request a transition or call 800-756-8993.
  2. Need other assistance? email Customer Service or call 1-877-256-2472.

MOST POPULAR STORIES