Intellectual Property (IP) is an asset that can be bought and sold. An IP assignment is a written agreement to legally transfer ownership of IP from one party (the Assignor) to another party (the Assignee).
For most forms of IP rights (IPR), particularly registered IPR like patents, a written assignment is required by law and this will need to be recorded with the respective patent or trade mark offices in each country.
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Unlike in a licence where the IP remains owned by the party who is licensing the IPR to the other party, under an assignment the new owner has full control over the IP and the previous owner will give up its control.
An Assignment Agreement generally does not include the grant back of any licence rights that would allow the Assignor to continue to use the IPR and the Assignor will have no rights to use and benefit from the IP, even if the new owner does not use or commercialise the IPR. As such, IP owners should think very carefully about whether to assign their IP if this is being used as the route to commercialisation. A licence may be more appropriate than an assignment (please refer to the Licensing IP guide).
Where an assignment is appropriate, the Assignor should consider the need for a separate licence agreement to grant back certain rights to use the IPR (for example for academic research and educational purposes).
When to assign IP?
The assignment of IP can take place in two sets of circumstances:
- Recording or confirming assignment:
- from researchers working on a particular project to the university
- from the university back to the inventor(s) when the university has decided not to pursue exploitation and the inventor(s) wish to do this in their personal capacity. This will be dependent on the university’s IP policy
- As part of a commercialisation transaction, including:
- Assignment to a spin-out company being formed by the university where it is agreed that the company should own (rather than license) the IP
- Sale of IP to a commercial partner where this is the best route to market (i.e., a licence is not appropriate or possible)
In the majority of circumstances, a university would expect to licence IP rights to a commercial partner and not to sell the IP.
Key Considerations
The following table is provided as a guide to help the parties appreciate the key considerations that each party will have when negotiating an assignment agreement. This assumes that the Assignor is a university, and the Assignee is an industry partner. In the template provided under the Framework, either the university or the industry partner can be the Assignor.
Discussing and understanding each party’s needs and concerns up front will help you reach an agreement more quickly and will help you apply the template to reach a fair agreement.
For organisations, particularly SMEs, that do not have any experience of buying or selling IP, this table will help you understand what the key provisions of an assignment agreement are and what you need to think about before you start discussions with the other party.
Further information on how to complete the template is provided with the guide and template agreement. Additional plain English guidance on the meaning of key clauses is provided in a separate annotated version of the template.
Resources
This table sets out the key points each party needs to consider when buying or selling IP. Understanding your own key considerations, as well as those of the other party, will help you to negotiate a fair and reasonable agreement that works for both parties. Further guidance on how each of these points is approached in the assignment template is given with the respective template.
Key points | Assignment Provision | University (Assignor) | Industry Partner (Assignee) |
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The Parties |
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Definition of IP |
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Assigned and retained rights |
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Payment terms |
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Warranties |
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