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How to Protect a Business Idea

by Milton Zlotnick

We are often asked by clients how to protect their ideas. The best way, of course, is to keep them secret. Any facetiousness aside, it is a sincere recommendation. Often people talk about their ideas to brag, to brain storm, and to make themselves feel as if they are adding to discussions. These are not good reasons to disclose information you want kept confidential. However, barring total secrecy, having a Confidentiality Agreement can help protect your ideas.

When to disclose information

Disclose information in increasing amounts as the deal progresses. Be sure that the balance of power in the deal remains relatively even in terms of oral commitments, commitments through information disclosure, money or contracts. The information disclosure should start with general concepts and progress to detail at the contract stage. Be sure to keep careful notes on what, when and where information was disclosed and who else was present at the meetings. These records can be extremely helpful if you ever end up in court.

Always disclose the minimum necessary to close the deal, without being fraudulent or misleading. This allows you maintain the most control over your product or idea, as well as protecting your options for changing the timeline or details later if needed. Once the deal is closed and the contract is signed, both parties should be more committed to the process and protecting information.

However, saying the minimum needed does not mean withholding material information that substantially affects the deal. For example, if your idea requires FDA approval, does not have it, and no one brings this up, it would be wiser to disclose this up front rather than to wait for this bomb to blow up after the deal has progressed. If a party feels angry or mislead then trust is broken, and, contract or not, it will be hard to proceed productively.

Consider who you are talking to about your product or information. Is the party a competitor who would greatly benefit from the stealing the idea or product, a customer who will be helped by the idea or product, or a partner whose own business would be complemented by your success? The other party’s interests should always be kept in mind. Also, be aware of who at the company you are dealing with. Dealing with the CEO is entirely different than dealing with a programmer or sales person. Remember to also consider the employee’s personal interests in having the information. For example, the head of product of development might think she would get a promotion if she presented your idea to the company as her own for a new product line. Risks of Exchanging Information: Confidentiality agreements can help protect the parties both receiving and disclosing information and are available as legal forms.

A surprising fact is that the party receiving information is often taking a greater risk than the party disclosing information. A good example of this risk is a movie studio. Script writers are dismayed to discover that studios not only refuse to sign a confidentiality agreement, but typically make the submitter sign an agreement stating that if the studio later develops something that looks like his or her idea, the submitter agrees not to challenge this.


Studios are in the business of coming up with ideas and making them into movies. Every time the studio receives a script or a pitch, it is receiving an idea. If a studio were to agree to keep this information confidential and that the submitter owned the idea, the studio would be subjecting itself to potential lawsuits for every idea submitted, even those already developed by employees who have never seen or heard of the submission. In court, the studio would have the burden of showing that despite the receipt of the submission, its employees who developed the similar idea never saw or received any information from the submission. This would be virtually impossible for the studio to prove and costly when multiplied by the huge number of submissions received. For studios, venture capitalists and other groups that work with large numbers of ideas, it may simply be too risky for them to sign a confidentiality agreement. Remember that in these circumstances you are usually the less powerful party and thus the other side forces you to assume more risk. Be sensitive to these considerations when you are disclosing to a competitor, by signing the confidentiality agreement you present, a competitor is risking a law suit from you even if it already knows, or has in development, what you are about to tell them.

For the disclosing party, the risks can also be great. The disclosing party risks (a) disclosure of such information to its competitors; (b) disclosure of the information to the public; and/or (c) use of such information to compete or gain market advantage against the disclosing party.

{ 22 comments… read them below or add one }

Raj March 17, 2008 at 9:06 pm

Hi,
This is a very good article. Well I have a question, appreciate if you could answer, I am starting up a business and the organisation which provides the license requires a business plan, the service or solution is not currently provided in the market but there are big players in the market who do not provide similar solution or services. What precautions I should take inorder to preserve my idea till I get approve and implement in the market. I also once implemented there will be competitors emerge into the market.

Regards

duke ampah March 27, 2008 at 1:58 am

hi
i have a brilliant business plan that could earn me millions of money.however i am scared the parties i may involve in the business may in the long run throw me out of the game since they have the capital to do so .

please advice me what should i do to protect my plan .what legal clause can i use in my proposal .thank you .

student; university of Ghana, legon

Dewanda Redwine April 4, 2008 at 11:39 am

I have a great business idea, I have shared with a few . So in order to keep my plan mine. How do I secure my business plan and the name of my business so no one can steal my idea.I have not got it started yet, but I sure would like soon. Thank you for any input.

seo April 21, 2008 at 2:18 pm

Hi,
I have a good business plan but i am not able to open a business so what can I do Please let me know how can I able to open a business.
Thanks

MUSONERA Dominique savio April 28, 2008 at 4:19 am

i have got a good business plan but i am worry that my business idea should be run because i don’t have necessary capital to run it myself. i have started to aproach some of the very known investors in my country but i don’t trust in them because they may take me out of the business after getting the full sens of the business. please tell me what to do.
MUSONERA Dominique Savio
Student at School of Finance and Banking
KIGALI RWANDA

MUSONERA Dominique savio April 28, 2008 at 4:20 am

i have got a good business plan but i am worry that my business idea should be run by others because i don’t have necessary capital to run it myself. i have started to aproach some of the very known investors in my country but i don’t trust in them because they may take me out of the business after getting the full sens of the business. please tell me what to do.
MUSONERA Dominique Savio
Student at School of Finance and Banking
KIGALI RWANDA

j brown May 20, 2008 at 3:43 am

Hi there.
I have drawn up some plans of a product that I would like to get manufactured overseas, but before i approach anyone what should I do to protect my idea and product. Patents are very expensive and i don’t know if one would even be necessary.
Thanks

Paula K May 29, 2008 at 1:31 am

What should I do to protect my idea from being stolen by others once I’ve launched the company. As it is a service which can be provided (but isn’t) by others, I’d like to know what can I do to protect myself.

thank you!

Bryan June 12, 2008 at 3:29 am

I am starting a apparel company, and my question is how can I get a loan from a bank if your personal credit is not that good and you do not have nothing for them to hold ?

ruth June 19, 2008 at 12:34 am

i want to build a theme park,so i want to apply for funding at the financial institution my problem is i don’t have collateral and security

Alex June 20, 2008 at 10:00 pm

Do I need a business plan to license and idea?

Alex June 20, 2008 at 10:02 pm

Do I need a business plan to license an idea?

aonixxer6 July 1, 2008 at 7:10 pm

I got a good business plan
I’ll start a strip club
But i’m still searching for some hot chicks
or I’ll won’t make enough money
Thanks
Student of ADEK Suriname

luvo August 8, 2008 at 4:36 am

I’m almost finished writing my business plan for providing a service that is not yet available in a particular country.
How can I secure my plan and its details?someone suggested copyrighting the plan, would work? What can I do to secure legal rights to business plan, its details and the service it will provide? So others interested in offering the service will have go through me and/or be able to offer franchise to people interested.

luvo August 8, 2008 at 4:36 am

How can I secure my plan and its details?someone suggested copyrighting the plan, would work? What can I do to secure legal rights to business plan, its details and the service it will provide? So others interested in offering the service will have go through me and/or be able to offer franchise to people interested.

luvo August 8, 2008 at 4:40 am

I have a Business Idea that will do wonders but I have not yet started with Business plan but I first make sure the Idea is protected before I make some presentation to my potential clients

How do I protect my Idea from being stolen

Jimmy February 12, 2009 at 7:06 pm

I need to perform a Business Plan and I’m in the first phase of it. How can I begin from the beginning with my right foot?

Moses Olude March 13, 2009 at 12:26 am

You have sincerely showed me another way of life in business world. I appreciate you the more. A question:i have an idea in which i want to execute with a nonprofit organisation. How would i go about it. Thank you.

Lisa March 15, 2009 at 8:19 am

I have a great idea for a business and really not sure if I want to run it myself. I really just want to sell the idea and let someone else have fun with it. I want to know though how to protect the idea when I present it to them. I do not want to present it and then they just kick me out and build it anyway without paying for the idea. What should I do?

Angel June 6, 2009 at 12:45 pm

This is great! I thought how I could protect my ideas, but I had no great crue, as now I feel comfortable on how to protect my ideas. Thanks

Catherine June 18, 2009 at 5:07 am

Thanks for all the great information. I found the article very helpful. I have come up with a great buisness idea which I think has the potential to be an extremely profitable and global venture. However I am not an engineer and the idea needs to be made into a working design and prototype. How do I get someone to build something for me? Does this mean handing over partial ownership to someone else in order for me to get the prototype designed and built. I also need an investor as I wouldnt have the money required to begin. Can you give me some much needed advice. Thanks

Seh June 28, 2009 at 7:16 pm

This is something I constantly worry about, because I’ve chose to move forward with my idea without protection from theft. I haven’t had any problems up to now, but I know I need to do something, because I am getting tons of trafffic. I am posting online videos to http://www.Adwido.com and they’ve boosted my traffic with keyword targeting. The more traffic I get now I worry about someone stealing my idea. I appreciate this article for pointing me in the right direction.

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