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Innovation and Intellectual Property Management (IIPM) Laboratory

Welcome to the Innovation and Intellectual Property (IIPM) Laboratory led by Prof. Frank Tietze. We are a community of academics, students and practitioners with a deep interest in the role of intellectual property (IP) in innovation systems and processes. We are part of the University's Engineering Department, Division E (commonly known as Institute for Manufacturing - IfM), particularly the IfM's Centre for Technology Management (CTM)

The IIPM lab adopts an engineering management (firm level) and relational perspective on IP within distributed and collaborative (open) innovation processes and systems for emerging (manufacturing) technologies. Employing predominately a problem-driven research philosophy and empirical, mostly but not entirely qualitative methods, our research focuses on the role of IP and its strategic management for developing and deploying sustainable innovation (e.g. climate change mitigation and adaptation technologies), addressing global challenges, such as climate change, achieving sustainable development goals (SDG), and accelerating sustainability transitions.

We run a weekly, hybrid (in-person + online) research seminar. If you share our passion and have an interest to discuss IP from an innovation perspective, come and join us. 

Our research on Innovation and IP Management (IIPM) focuses on two priority areas:

1. Strategic IP management for sustainable innovation 

We focus on better understanding the role IP and its strategic relevance for innovation systems and processes, i.e. particularly technology-based firms, e.g. within R&D activities, innovation processes but also in corporate strategy and decision making. Our research focuses on the strategic use and management of IP in the context of emerging sustainable technologies, particularly those that help address global challenges, such as climate change, achieving sustainable development goals (SDG), and accelerating sustainability transitions. 

2. Novel technologies for reimagining IP management

Many services and business processes become increasingly technology-based or technology-supported. Technologies underpinning IP management have changed drastically over the recent decades with patent data being digitized and the continuous development of increasingly sophisticated software solutions for analyzing and visualizing IP data. This has just been the beginning and we are at a tipping point for how IP is being managed. Technologies such as AI, deep and machine learning, natural language processing and large language models have been adopted in other domains already to a much more sophisticated level than for IP analytics. Technologies, such as Blockchain (and distributed ledger technologies) may contribute to the digitization of licensing transactions and the automation of royalty payment streams enabling much more complex and innovative licensing models. We are interested to better understand use cases and business models of such novel technologies, with AI and Blockchain being just two examples that have potential to contribute to the development of and "reinventing" IP management with a positive societal impact. 

 

 

 

 

News & Blog articles

Patent Olympiad at IPOS IP Week in Singapore

9 October 2024

Dr Nigel Clarke, Visiting Fellow to the IIPM Lab is co-founder of the Patent Olympiad, which recently took place in Singapore at the IPOS IP Week. He has provided a short article below. powinners2024.jpeg Image by N. Clarke. Nigel is all the way to the right. By Nigel Clarke. (C) 2024 Patent searching is a profession...

New EC Bulletin: Prof. Tietze reflects on the EC POINT project

8 October 2024

In the recently published European IP Helpdesk Bulletin Prof. Tietze reflects on what has happened to the capabilities of SMEs to manage IP in open innovation projects following the publication of the EC POINT report in 2021. The Bulletin is available here: https://op.europa.eu/en/publication-detail/-/publication/ee45fb15-...

Farewell to Alexander Viets and David Gross

2 October 2024

We are saying good-bye to two of our IIPM visitors. Alexander Viets was a visiting PhD student from the University of Muenster. David Gross visited us to complete his master thesis as part of his programme at the RWTH Aachen. We look forward to continue our collaborations on joint papers and wish you all the best for your...