Provisionally

For inventors

Turn protected invention material into a counsel-ready package and a safer buyer route.

You do not need another tool that only says it can write a patent. You need to know what is protectable, what is commercially worth claiming, what should not be over-disclosed, who might care, and how to talk to them without giving the invention away.

What gets built first

A counsel-ready packet and non-confidential fit brief: organized record, support map, prior-art questions, commercial route hypothesis, protected status, ownership posture, evidence of strategic fit, and what is explicitly not being disclosed yet. No confidential claims, drawings, mechanisms, formulas, source code, or enabling examples go into the first outreach.

The first useful answer may be “wrong team,” “too early,” “use this portal,” “talk to open innovation,” or “we can invite a formal process.” That is still progress. It tells you where the commercialization path actually starts.

What you keep control over

  1. The readiness record.We start after there is filed IP, a public technical record, a prototype/lab trail, or an equivalent protected package.
  2. The disclosure boundary.The fit brief says what can be shared and what is explicitly held back until a company process exists.
  3. The buyer hypothesis.Name the business unit, problem area, company type, or strategic need without revealing the confidential solution.
  4. The next gate.If the buyer wants more, the next step happens through the buyer’s submission path, NDA, counsel, or scoped review process.

Intake

Inventor fit-brief intake

Use this to test the route. Do not disclose the invention itself.

Inventor fit brief
Readiness record first. Disclosure later, if invited.