Lewis Katz School of Medicine, research, Brand, Aging Cardiovascular Discovery Center

Invention Submission

As the first step towards commercialization, the Office of Technology Commercialization and Business Development will review your invention to determine whether to pursue intellectual property (IP) protection (e.g. patent and copyright).

The invention disclosure process starts by submitting an invention disclosure using the Electronic Research Administration (eRA) Portal. 

Inventions should be submitted as early and completely as possible (although it may be amended later) using the following steps.

Step 1:  Submit Your Invention
  • Log into the eRA Portal: eRA Portal
  • Under Technology Transfer, select Invention Disclosures from the drop-down menu
  • Select New Invention Report to start your invention disclosure
     

View the disclosure submission training guide for further information.

Important Note:  Please contact our office before submitting any invention-related manuscripts for publication or presentation.  Public disclosures that occur prior to filing for IP protection can jeopardize the university’s ability to pursue patent protection.

Step 2: Invention Disclosure Evaluation

Your invention disclosure will be assigned to a technology commercialization team member to assess the invention’s IP and commercial potential.  Within 3-4 weeks after submission a team member will follow up to discuss their analysis with you.  Outside consultants, experts, and patent counsel are often retained to assist with this evaluation.

Step 3:  Intellectual Property Protection

If pursuing IP protection is appropriate, Temple’s patent counsel drafts, files and manages Temple’s patents and copyrights covering the invention.

After Temple decides to pursue an invention, the Technology Commercialization and Business Development group begins the commercialization process by determining the appropriate path to market. TCBD seeks to license Temple's intellectual property rights to an established or startup company to enable advancement of the technology in exchange for royalties, licensing fees and other forms of compensation.