Wednesday, October 13, 2010

U.S. Patent Application Survey

Federal Register: October 13, 2010 (Volume 75, Number 197)]
[Notices][Page 62761-62762]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr13oc10-32]

To view the complete text of this comment request see:
http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=2010_register&docid=fr13oc10-32

---------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Patent and Trademark Office
Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request

Title: United States Patent Applicant Survey.

Avg. Hours per Response: The USPTO estimates that it will take the public 30 minutes (0.50 hours) to complete the surveys, with the exception of the surveys for the independent inventors, which are estimated to take 15 minutes (0.25 hours) to complete. This includes the time to gather the necessary information, respond to the surveys, and submit them to the USPTO. The USPTO estimates that it will take the same amount of time to respond to the surveys, whether they are completed online or mailed to the USPTO.

Needs and Uses: The USPTO developed the United States Patent Applicant Survey as part of a continuing effort to better predict the future growth of patent application filings by understanding applicant intentions. The main purpose of this survey is to determine the number of application filings that the USPTO can expect to receive over the next three years from patent-generating entities, ranging from
[[Page 62762]]
large domestic corporations to independent inventors. The USPTO also uses this survey in response to the Senate Appropriations Report 106- 404 (September 8, 2000), which directed the USPTO to ``develop a workload forecast with advice from a representative sample of industry and the inventor community. There are two versions of the survey: one for large domestic corporations and small and medium-sized businesses and one for universities, non-profit research organizations, and independent inventors. The large domestic corporations, small and medium-sized businesses, universities, non-profit research organizations, and independent inventors responding to these surveys will provide the USPTO with the number of application filings that they plan to submit, in addition to providing general feedback concerning industry trends and the survey itself. The USPTO will use this feedback to anticipate demand and estimate future revenue flow more reliably; to identify input and output triggers and allocate resources to meet and understand customer needs; and to reassess output and capacity goals and realign organization quality control measures with applicant by division.