How would someone... 19:42 - Apr 5 with 4560 views | Dyfnant | go about ‘protecting’ an idea that could make the company they work for a significant sum of money? Want to make sure I get a reasonable cut if it works. | |
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How would someone... on 19:45 - Apr 5 with 4552 views | Fireboy2 | I will tell you if you tell me your idea | | | |
How would someone... on 19:45 - Apr 5 with 4547 views | Lohengrin | I stand to be corrected but if you work for a company and this innovation you’ve thought up is within that field of endeavour as you’re under contract in the eyes of the law it’s the company’s intellectual property. | |
| An idea isn't responsible for those who believe in it. |
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How would someone... on 19:49 - Apr 5 with 4527 views | ItchySphincter | Agreed. You would have most likely signed away any intellectual property by accepting the terms of employment. Some companies have a good idea bonus but what's yours is theirs. | |
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How would someone... on 19:50 - Apr 5 with 4523 views | londonlisa2001 | If you had the idea in work, or invented something in work, and you’re an employee, it belongs to your employer, not you. Hopefully if you ever have an idea you have it when you’re not in work. Unless you’re something like an engineer or coder etc etc, in which case your contract will often still say it’s theirs not yours. | | | |
How would someone... on 19:51 - Apr 5 with 4515 views | raynor94 | Ahh, the good old suggestions scheme with British Steel. | |
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How would someone... on 19:59 - Apr 5 with 4500 views | WxmJax | A company I worked for had a scheme where the best idea got a video player at the end of the year. This guy had an idea that was reckoned to save around £100k. He got £100 for his idea and a video recorder. Another multi-European firm I worked for asked for suggestions on how to improve quality and savings. You 'could' get an award of it was the best idea but nothing concrete. There was a big push for it from the people who's job it was to improve quality and savings I didn't partake. | |
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How would someone... on 20:23 - Apr 5 with 4459 views | WarwickHunt | Could it work for a competitor? | | | |
How would someone... on 20:31 - Apr 5 with 4444 views | Fireboy2 | Nice one | | | |
How would someone... on 21:00 - Apr 5 with 4384 views | theloneranger | You could do what Terry Matthews did. He completed his GPO apprenticeship at their research lab at Martlesham Heath, and then took his ideas with him to Canada to work in a chipmaking business. Here he met his mate and future business partner Mike Cowpland, who also had great ideas, and they started up MITEL (Mike and Terry). The rest is history and Matthews became Wales first billionaire!! | |
| Everyday above ground ... Is a good day! 😎 |
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How would someone... on 21:09 - Apr 5 with 4374 views | Dyfnant | I thought of it last night, only work Monday to Wednesday on minimum wage these days (had enough of shifts) does that count as in work? My idea could be used worldwide by a number of companies, could be very useful in this troubled climate. | |
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How would someone... on 00:28 - Apr 6 with 4308 views | DJack | Honestly, go to a competitor (with a lawyer). Good luck mate. | |
| It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring. - Carl Sagan |
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How would someone... on 00:43 - Apr 6 with 4299 views | londonlisa2001 | If you go to a competitor to offer them something that would harm your current employer you’d be sacked best case. Any competitor who took you up on it wouldn’t be worth a damn anyway as it’s completely unethical and any decent company would avoid it as they’d be taken to the cleaners. | | | |
How would someone... on 00:45 - Apr 6 with 4296 views | londonlisa2001 | Depends what type of work and what your contract says. Most people are shocked to find out the company they work for owns their ideas. | | | |
How would someone... on 02:24 - Apr 6 with 4276 views | DJack | Aye, but the fact that your emploter can own your ideas and yet you only get a wage and not a share of the profits is criminally one sided. If your idea has indirectly come from/during your employment then why the fck does your employer own it? As far as ethical goes look at JRM's company and many others, it's fine then to be unethical, it's just "finding opportunities". | |
| It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring. - Carl Sagan |
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How would someone... on 08:03 - Apr 6 with 4218 views | dickythorpe | Is it a breathing aid Dyfnant? If so resign and go to a competitor. [Post edited 6 Apr 2020 8:04]
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How would someone... on 09:37 - Apr 6 with 4177 views | WarwickHunt | Is it specific to your industry? Can you protect the IP? | | | |
How would someone... on 09:50 - Apr 6 with 4156 views | ladyjack | Are you close to retirement ? | | | |
How would someone... on 22:02 - Apr 6 with 4052 views | Dyfnant | Gonna be 10 - 15 years probably | |
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How would someone... on 22:03 - Apr 6 with 4047 views | Dyfnant | Pretty much so. Don’t know how I’d go about the IP bit | |
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How would someone... on 22:04 - Apr 6 with 4044 views | Dyfnant | No. | |
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How would someone... on 22:28 - Apr 6 with 4006 views | WarwickHunt | PM’d you. | | | |
How would someone... on 22:56 - Apr 6 with 3974 views | londonlisa2001 | Sorry, only just seen this. I agree - it’s crazy that you don’t own an idea you have. But your employer owns your entire output during work, so it’s no different. | | | |
How would someone... on 07:15 - Apr 7 with 3913 views | Professor | Universities being the odd exception where the originator keeps much of the IP | | | |
How would someone... on 07:19 - Apr 7 with 3910 views | dickythorpe | In that case " I'm out" | | | |
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