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https://www.epo.org/fr/node/1203505

Novelty and prior art

For your idea to be regarded as an invention, at least one significant part of its technology must be completely novel (that is, new). There must be no evidence that this novel aspect of your idea has ever been described before, or used for the same purpose before.

Not all the technology of an invention needs to be novel.

An idea may be an invention if existing technologies are combined in a way that is novel, or used in a way that is novel.

The inventive element might be only a small part of the whole idea. But if that small part makes a big difference to the commercial prospects of the idea, it could be an important and valuable invention.

Many people claim to have thought of a novel use of technology. The reality is that in most cases, the idea is already known. It therefore cannot be novel and so there may be little point trying to commercialise it. The inventor will usually be unable to protect it strongly, and without strong intellectual property protection to attract them (Part 5), few companies or investors will be interested.

How do you find out if your idea is novel? You do it by searching for prior art.

Why is novelty important?

For an invention, a lack of novelty matters for two main reasons:

You are unlikely to be able to obtain any worthwhile intellectual property rights (Part 5 ) for an idea that is not novel. In most cases this means that your idea will have little or no commercial value. (Exceptions include ideas that rely more for their success on skilful marketing than IPR, or where a rights owner agrees to license the IPR.) An idea that is not novel cannot legally belong to you. If someone else owns the rights to it, you risk having legal action taken against you if you try to exploit it without their permission. Nor can you claim the idea as yours even if it has no legal owner (for example, if it is an old idea).

For example, electric toothbrushes used to be too expensive to sell well. Then someone discovered that it was possible to use a much cheaper motor. Prices fell and sales soared. This new type of electric toothbrush simply included a well known motor, and functioned in a well known way, so there was no invention - but the novelty of combining motor and toothbrush gave it a large commercial advantage.

But even if an idea is novel, novelty on its own may not mean much. For an invention to have good commercial potential, it needs to be a significant improvement on prior art.

Whether or not an invention has a significant improvement depends on many factors. Some improvements may be small in technology terms but have high commercial value.

For example, the drinks can ring-pull is simple technology, but its advantages - (a) it is secured by a rivet that does not penetrate the can, and (b) the underside of the ring is shaped to give mechanical advantage  - made it a significant invention with huge commercial value.

On the other hand, it is possible for a commercially successful idea to be novel but not particularly inventive.

What is prior art?

Prior art is any evidence that your invention is already known.

Prior art does not need to exist physically or be commercially available. It is enough that someone, somewhere, sometime previously has described or shown or made something that contains a use of technology that is very similar to your invention.

A prehistoric cave painting can be prior art. A piece of technology that is centuries old can be prior art. A previously described idea that cannot possibly work can be prior art. Anything can be prior art.

An existing product is the most obvious form of prior art. This can lead many inventors to make a common mistake: just because they cannot find a product containing their invention for sale in any shops, they assume that their invention must be novel.

The reality is very different. Many inventions never become products, yet there may be evidence of them somewhere. That evidence - whatever form it may take - will be prior art.

There are no accurate statistics, but some experts estimate that for every recorded invention that eventually reaches the market, ten never will. This means that if you want to find out if your invention is novel, you should indeed search products past and present - but you should also search much further.

The most important place for further prior art searching is the worldwide patent system. Some patent databases - including the European Patent Office's free database Espacenet - contain 150 million documents, collected and indexed over many years by patent offices in many countries.

Thanks to the internet, and to the international classification systems used to organise inventions by subject, it is quite easy for inventors to do their own patent searching. We describe how to do this later.

Competing art

While looking for prior art, you should also look for competing art. These are ideas that may not be at all like yours but do the same job. It is important to study competing art for two reasons:

Most inventions are a solution to a problem, and most problems have more than one possible solution. You need to examine other solutions, as some may offer more advantages than yours. If you try to exploit your idea commercially, alternative solutions may be strong competition. In order to argue successfully that your solution is better than alternatives, you need to know what the alternatives are!

Is the idea ‘obvious’?

To be regarded as an invention, an idea needs to include an inventive step. An inventive step must be non-obvious - that is, it would not readily occur to an expert in the relevant technology.

The word ‘obvious' comes from the Latin term for ‘upon the road' (ob via), and in the sense of inventions it means something that would be the next logical step along your path from the problem to the solution.

Judging what might be obvious can be very difficult. Many inventions involve combining equipment (for example, fitting a miniature torch to a key-ring). The result of such combinations might be a new product, but its properties or functionality might be entirely predictable as soon as one knew its components.  As such, it could be considered obvious. 

A product in which one component has been replaced for a different one with equivalent properties could be considered to be obvious (for example, a small metal spring is replaced with a rubber cone).

In another situation there might be a new problem which can be solved with a well known piece of equipment: the ‘novel' process for solving this problem might be considered obvious if there was only one solution to the problem, and it would be known to the typical technician facing the problem (the so-called ‘person skilled in the art').

On the other hand, when components are combined to make a product or process with properties which are greater than the sum of its parts, or better than expected, then that could be a non-obvious invention. Or an invention could come from where there are many possible solutions to a problem, but the inventor has had to research and select the best one. Or an inventor might defy some technical prejudice and solve a problem by doing something every other expert had previously believed would not work.

Where do inventors go wrong?

When it comes to prior art searching, many inventors simply scratch the surface. By far the most common mistake they make is to assume that their idea is novel, when a simple patent search would tell them that it was not. They then make things worse by spending often large sums of money on an idea that is extremely unlikely to be commercially successful.

For example, the inventor of an odourless toilet bowl visited many companies with a complete working toilet, performing 1600 demonstration flushes. But he had never done a patent search. Eventually he found a company interested enough to do its own patent search. They soon found so much prior art that it became obvious that the idea was unprotectable. The inventor threw away his toilet.

Prior art searching

We will now take you step by step through two prior art search processes: a product search and a patent search.
You must do both to be confident that you have done a thorough prior art search. You must also do them before spending significant amounts of time and money on your idea.
Warnings!
It may take only minutes on the internet to find prior art. If you do not look for it, companies and investors almost certainly will. You are unlikely to get help or funding if they find crucial prior art that you have missed.
Do not ignore evidence you do not like. The purpose of a prior art search is to go looking for evidence you may not like.
An absence of prior art at the time of your searches may not be a permanent absence. You should update your prior art searches periodically as you develop your idea.
No prior art search - not even an official Patent Office examination - is regarded in law as conclusive proof of novelty.

Step 1: Finding the right keywords

To maximise your chances of finding relevant information, spend some time thinking of key words or search terms which best describe your idea.
When using search engines, the most obvious key words may be unhelpful. For example, let us say your idea is a mousetrap. A search for ‘mousetrap' produces over two million hits - many of them irrelevant, and an impossible number to search.
But a search for ‘rodent trap' (what else it is) and ‘trapping mice' (what it does) produces 20,000 and 700 hits respectively. These are still not small numbers but  they are likely to be more relevant, so we can usefully start searching here.
Another problem: the most productive search terms may be specialist technical terms that you do not know. For example, a search for external devices that pump blood round the human body required the crucial medical term ‘extra corporeal'. A searcher with no medical knowledge would be unlikely to know this term, but might find it while examining the results of other key word searches. It may therefore take a few preliminary searches to find better keywords to use for more accurate searches.
Look out too for new terms for new technologies: for example, ‘virtual fit' for software systems to replace trying on clothes in shops, and ‘telemedicine' for remote monitoring of patients in their own homes.

Step 2: Product searching

You need to find out what is already on the market:

That is similar to your idea (prior art). That tackles the same problem (competing art).

How long will your search take?

It could range from a few minutes, if your first keywords are accurate and there is a great deal of prior art, to many hours.
The best advice is that you must be prepared to spend all the time it takes to be confident that you have done a proper job. Your mission is to find evidence that disproves the novelty of your invention. Your hope is that you will fail, but in the interests of a thorough search you must put that to the back of your mind.
For the same reason, assume that if you are not finding prior art, you are looking in the wrong places.
Keep searching until you are confident that there is nowhere else left to look. And keep records of everywhere you look and everything relevant that you find.
A thorough and well-recorded search is essential - because how else do you prove an absence of prior art?

We are going to show you how to use the European Patent Office's free (Espacenet) database, which is easy for beginners to use.
However, you are unlikely to be as good as a professional searcher, so in some cases it may be advisable to ask a professional to search for you. (See Professional patent searching .) An exception is if there is so much prior art that your search ends quickly!

Obsolete technologies or products may be prior art, so check historical as well as current sources of information.
Products in development but not yet on the market may be prior art, so search news sites, industry journals, trade show and exhibition websites. Perhaps especially search academic research activity, as this is where many new products start out, often years before a commercial product appears.
You should also of course search offline - in shops, books, periodicals, printed catalogues etc.
And talk to people with relevant experience - for example, retailers and suppliers - who will have seen products come and go over the years and may have seen your idea among them. (People who have retired from relevant careers can be valuable sources of information, as their experience may go back much further than current practitioners!) 

Step 3: Patent searching

For many ideas, patent searching will be far more important than product searching. Although many products on the market do not have a patent, they are probably heavily outnumbered by the many ideas that are successfully patented but never reach the market.
Patent searching involves two skills:

Finding every patent document that is relevant to your invention. Interpreting the significance of your patent search findings. We will deal with this in Part 3 .
Professional patent searching

It is advisable to use professional patent search services if you can afford them. Such services typically include:

A PATLIB (PATent LIBrary) centre. A joint initiative of the national patent offices of the EPO member states and their regional patent information centres, the PATLIB network consists of over 320 centres throughout Europe. Qualified and experienced staff can provide a range of search and other information services. Database searches offered by many libraries and business information services. Many of these are provided at low cost as a public service, but may not be performed by qualified or experienced patent searchers.

Searches by patent attorneys. Fees usually vary according to the type of search you need. A patent attorney will also be able to help you interpret your search findings. This is the real skill in patent searching.

  • Commercial search services offered by national Patent Offices. Options and costs may vary.
  • Commercial search service providers. There are several major companies in this market, and many smaller specialist consultancies. See, for example, the members of PATCOM . Fees and services vary, so shop around.
Simple Espacenet searching

The following guidance is intended to show you how easy it is to start searching. 

  • First, you will use your keywords to find relevant patents. This may produce enough prior art to end your search.
  • If it does not, you will use some of the relevant patents identified to find the relevant subject classification for your idea. This can give better results than keywords alone.

Using keywords

Using your list of keywords, prepare search strings of up to ten keywords. Use Espacenet's wildcard feature to find plurals and other variants. For example, to find ventilator(s)ventilate(s)ventilatedventilating and ventilation all at the same time, just enter ventilat*.

Your first result list 

Open Espacenet. Enter your search string in the Smart search bar at the top of the screen. Select the magnifying glass icon to the right and in a few seconds you will see a result list.

Espacenet screenshot update

 

Are the results relevant?

  • If not, go back to the Smart search bar and try a different search string.

Examining individual patents

  • If you want to know more than you can learn from the Bibliographic data view, you may want to examine the full patent.

Working with Bibliographic data view

  • In the result list, select a result that looks relevant. This opens up a Bibliographic data view that includes an abstract and drawings. One or both may be all you need to decide whether that patent is relevant.
  • If it is not relevant, go back to your results list and try another patent document.
  • If you want to know more than you can learn from the Bibliographic data view, you may want to examine the full patent.

Examining individual patents

You can download the entire patent by selecting ‘Original document' from the Bibliographic data drop-down menu. It may however be quicker to try one or more of the following steps to find key items of information:

  • Navigate through the drawings in the Bibliographic data view
  • Select the Citations view. Among the references listed under Cited documents, search reports list other patent documents that official examiners have regarded as relevant. You may find a crucial document here that might otherwise have been missed.
  • Select the ‘Claims view'. Claims can sometimes be difficult to interpret but they determine the commercial strength of a patent and so are extremely important. Do any of them sound like the claims you might want to make for your own invention? If so, the patent may be prior art as you will not be able to claim what has already been disclosed by someone else.

Claims applied for versus claims granted

It is worth pointing out here that most documents in patent databases will be applications only and not granted patents. Although the claims in applications count as disclosures, they are often modified later and so may be no guide to (a) the claims – if any – eventually granted, and (b) the extent to which your idea might infringe someone else's patent.

After you have repeated this procedure a few times you may have found enough prior art to end your search. If not, try shifting the basis of your search from keywords to classifications, i.e. International Patent Classification'’ (IPC) and/or 'Cooperative Patent Classification'’ (CPC), the latter being an extension of the IPC.

Using classifications

Go back to the Bibliographic data view of the most relevant patent documents you have found and select the corresponding CPC and/or IPC classification.

Espacenet screenshot update

Finding your first classification

  • When you select an IPC or CPC, a pop-up window appears with a description of that classification. Does it or any of its near neighbours sound relevant to your idea?
  • If so, right-click or tap and hold down specific classification and select Open link in new tab/window. In the Classification search page that appears select the box alongside the classification you want to find. The selected classification should automatically appear in the Selected classificationpanel on the right. Select Find patents.
  • A list of all patent documents in that classification appears.

Examining your result list

  • Check through the patent documents, exactly as you did with your keywords results list. This time you may find a higher proportion relevant to your idea. If not, you may need to look for other CPC and/or IPCs.

Finding other relevant classifications

  • There may well be more than one relevant classification for your idea, so repeat all steps described under Using classifications for other relevant patent documents from your keyword result lists. If the same CPCs or IPCs keep appearing, there is a good (but not guaranteed) chance that you are not missing any other important classifications.
  • You can also use the Classification search page, to find other relevant classifications: enter one or more of your keywords in the search bar andadd one or more of your keywords and select Search to find relevant CPCs/IPCs.
  • Turning on the Filter toggle lets you view a list of CPC/IPCs for your result list by corresponding filter categories.

Refining your search

Have you ended up with very long CPC or IPC lists? Try combining the classifications with title or abstract to reduce the number of results. You can use either Smart search bar queries or the Advanced search query builder to add or change search criteria.

For example, let's imagine we want to find patent documents relevant to mousetraps.

  • Mousetraps are in CPC A01M23 "Traps for animals", which on the date of our search held over 7 739 patent documents – too many to search easily.
  • Searching again for "a01m23" in the CPC field and "mouse*" in the in Title or abstract field in Advanced search brings brought the number down to a much more manageable and relevant 817 patent documents.
  • If we do not find prior art within those 817, we might try again with, for example, A01M23 in the CPC or IPC field and keywords rodent*, or rat*, or bird*, or small mammal*.

In general, the skill in searching is to narrow down your search as much as possible without inadvertently excluding something that might be relevant.