Featured Legal Services

   > Trade Mark Registration

   > Internet, IT & E-business

   > HR & Enterprise Structuring

   > Deal Making & Contracting

   > IP Transactions

   > Commercialisation Strategy
 

About Dilanchian
  What we do |Testimonials |FAQ
 

IP + IT + HR + Business Law

Intellectual property Contracts

Web/IT Entertainment/Media HR

Technology Commercialisation

Keyword Search
advertising beverage branding business finance business law business model business policies and procedures business sale/purchase business structuring case study checklist china commercialisation communications compliance confidential information contract copyright corporations law definitions digital rights management domain name e-commerce entertainment industry entrepreneurship fashion food futurism human resources index information technology innovation intellectual property internet invention ip licensing ip management ip protection ip revenue ip strategy legal history legal knowledge management legal risk management licensing litigation marketing law migration music negotiation patent project management publishing retailing security spam statistics strategy taxation technology management trade mark trade practices trends trust law united kingdom united states valuation venture capital web 2.0 web ventures wine
Television program costs per episode | Print |  E-mail
The Fly Speaks
Friday, 30 May 2008

the_fly_speaks"The money men at PBL Media and its private equity owner, CVC Asia Pacific, are big fans of Ramsay. Kitchen Nightmares and Hell's Kitchen cost Nine an estimated A$30,000 and A$15,000 an episode, compared with about A$1 million for each episode of Nine's hit local drama Underbelly and about A$300,00 an episode for its new reality show Domestic Blitz."

"TV chief tells of recipe for success", Rear Window column, The Australian Financial Review, 30 May 2008, p. 48.

 

Further reading:

Ramsay's net worth - A recipe to make a high net worth celebrity chef

PBL Media - Billions made with Internet business exit strategies and  DVRs and video on demand in Australia

Channel Nine - Think digital, think future proofing

Television formats law - Copyright traps for television formats

Read more...
 
How to select a suitable business model, deal or contract | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Wednesday, 28 May 2008

suit_on_coathangerIs your business seeking to collaborate with others but is unsure how to go about it? Are you unsure of the options, legal jargon and financial terms of engagement? Here's the classic process to unblocking this log jam.

 

Business relationships involve deals, deal making, business models and contracts. How do these concepts differ? How do you select the best option for a particular situation?

 

This post illustrates our specialisation in helping clients define their business relationships. It's part of doing business and more broadly, business structuring and enterprise structuring.

Read more...
 
Report lists top six ICT trends | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Wednesday, 21 May 2008

pc_roxana_gonzalezA new report by the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) highlights six trends in the Information Communications Technology (ICT) sector.

 

The report suffers from a fixation on technology. Its comfort zone is bits, bytes and gizmos. Equal space should have been given to use made of IT and communications by business and consumers and the wide-ranging implications of changing patterns of use.

   

The 18 page report is titled Top six trends in communications and media technologies, applications and services: possible implications (PDF file).

Read more...
 
Robert Mondavi and the commercialisation of Leeuwin Estate | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Sunday, 18 May 2008

1980_leewin_estate_chardonnay robert_mondavi_aged_90"Naked ladies dancing on the tongue." This is how I responded on first tasting Art Series Chardonnay at the cellar door of Leeuwin Estate in 2004.

 

Hearing my uncensored appreciation, the man serving me at the cellar door, Mr D. Moore, told me a story. He told me about the wine's background.

 

It is arguably Australia's greatest Chardonnay. It's almost A$100 a bottle.

Read more...
 
Speed pays in IP commercialisation | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Friday, 16 May 2008

innovationSpeed pays. You already know that customers pay more if you can deliver fast with no reduction in quality.

 

Speed wins. Speed is a critical pre-requisite to be competitive in markets.

 

Speed in innovation pays and wins. In a commercialisation venture it is helpful to measure speed. Get a measure of the speed of change of intellectual property and the agility of the management team, business processes, methodologies and technology.

Read more...
 
Structured networks and the next internet wave | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Wednesday, 14 May 2008

planet_mozWith brilliant imagination, in its opening ceremony the Sydney Olympics presented Nikki Webster in the Australian experience of going swimming. (*)

 

More than water skills will be needed beyond the Beijing Olympics for Australian online businesses to survive and thrive against the next internet wave.

 

From 1995 the web encouraged water sports. Today the internet has moved beyond surfing.

 

The question here is how should Australian online businesses compete in the years ahead to serve local, international or global markets.

 

Read more...
 
Social media's deep well | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Friday, 09 May 2008

the_well_logoWhen did social media or online social networking start? Was it a few years ago off the back of MySpace, Facebook and Web 2.0?

 

No. It was thriving in San Francisco and the Bay Area before Mark Zuckerberg, twenty-something CEO and founder of Facebook, was born.

Read more...
 
Business endurance depends mostly on you | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Thursday, 08 May 2008

good_to_great What is the secret of enduring greatness for a company? Jim Collins has an answer.

 

Collins is a prominent writer on business management and author of business books which are among the all time best sellers. He wrote Good to Great and co-authored Built to Last. An excellent overview of Good to Great is the one here by Jim Belshaw. 

 

In his recent article in Fortune magazine, The secret of enduring greatness, Collins revisits his familiar theme of business survival and endurance. His data includes who's in and out of the Fortune 500 list.

 

And this is what he concludes is the secret of enduring greatness for a company: "Whether you prevail or fail, endure or die, whether you make it onto the Fortune 500, and whether you stay there, depends more on what you do to yourself than on what the world does to you."

Read more...
 
Six fashion hints for entrepreneurs | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Tuesday, 06 May 2008

lb_thumb Fashion, industrialisation and entrepreneurship are forever linked.

 

Something old. The word "entrepreneur" was made fashionable by someone who grew rich as a cotton factory entrepreneur. The French economic theorist, Jean-Baptiste Say (1767-1832), is credited as the first in continental Europe to write about entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship. He was inspired by Adam Smith.

Read more...
 
Cue > Intellectual property law advice | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Thursday, 01 May 2008
cue_shortThis is the May 2008 issue of Cue, the Dilanchian email newsletter. Cue is a monthly selected list of our Library articles and Lighbulb blog posts on IP and business law. You can freely subscribe to Cue or our full RSS feed, or both.
Read more...
 
What's your intellectual property strategy? | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Wednesday, 30 April 2008

lb_thumb QUESTION: What are the most effective strategies for commercialisation of a company's ideas, products, R&D and intellectual property? 

 

ANSWER: "It is the approach that best suits - and is most closely aligned with - the company's overall corporate strategy and the competitive environment in which the company operates."

Read more...
 
Collaboration for invention | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Wednesday, 30 April 2008

henry_chesbrough A mantra for our business environment emphasising innovation and collaboration could be: "Collaborate to survive and invent."

 

Collaboration is as old as the first invention. Bill Bryson's remarkable book, A Short History of Nearly Everything, tells us in his 29th chapter about teardrop-shaped stone hand-axes.

 

These axes first appeared about a million and a half years ago and are certainly the most common technology for the vast majority of human history. They have come to be known as Acheulean tools.

Read more...
 
Economics before legal solutions | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Monday, 28 April 2008

lb_thumbI have a favourite question in conversations with start-ups and new clients. It is a question which leads to discussions about the client's business or commercial situation. 

 

It's a question designed to shed light on the client's business model, industry economics and facts relevant to providing a better legal solution.

Read more...
 
Ray Charles learned from his mama | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Monday, 28 April 2008

us_dollar_bill_lars_christensen

We all know that owning, controlling and trading in intellectual property (IP) can create wealth. Losing ownership and control, or not trading IP, can lose wealth.

 

Industry case studies bring these truths to life. One for the music industry was in BusinessWeek last week. It reports US census data showing one in four U.S. record stores around in 2002 was gone by 2005, a net loss of 1,900 stores. It points at digital retailer, iTunes, which boasts 6 million songs.

 

Personal case studies make the truths register. We did it in Music Business Entrepreneurship: Eulogy for James Brown. We do it now for Brown's predecessor, and fellow Georgian, Ray Charles (1930-2004).

Read more...
 
Improve your creativity, invention, innovation | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Friday, 18 April 2008

2020_think_big We welcome and make no charge for conversations with new clients about how we might help with their intellectual property. To get you into the groove to call, here are some thoughts on creativity, invention and innovation. We are tracking with Australia's 2020 Summit.

 

All human beings have a creative urge. Mine for some months has been to write about the following four minute home video on YouTube. It's the Fountains of the Bellagio Hotel in Los Vegas. The music is Dawn, Ayeshe's Dance, a piece in the Gayane ballet by Aram Khachaturian. Observe the fountain's interplay with the music and then read on.

 

Read more...
 
Intellectual property is not a thing | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Thursday, 17 April 2008

stone_tool Speaking in workshops and seminars I've often posed a puzzle to wake up the audience. I've asked: "What is the most powerful thing in the cave of a cave man when he skins a freshly killed beast using a stone tool?"

 

Most guess that the most powerful thing must be the stone tool. Few point to the one thing that helps the cave man know where to hunt, what to hunt, how to skin and how to fashion tools to help in all aspects of survival.

 

That most powerful thing is the cave man's brain.

Read more...
 
Consultant or contractor intellectual property | Print |  E-mail
Lightbulb (Dilanchian IP blog)
Wednesday, 16 April 2008

ip_roadmapIn disputes between clients and their consultants two questions often arise.

 

They are whether money is outstanding and who owns the intellectual property in completed and delivered work. The short answer for both questions is, it depends... and a lot on what is in writing.

Read more...
 
Website terms of use reduce risk | Print |  E-mail
Library
Wednesday, 16 April 2008

website_first_aidMillions of people each day accept or click "OK" to terms of use on websites and internet facilities. The terms of use regulate legal relationships, particularly contractual dealings between users and site owners.

 

Terms of use are useful because most online intellectual property (IP) and general business law issues can be partially or fully treated or neutralised with comprehensive, customised and site-specific provisions. This is apparent from common law (ie court decisions in Australia and elsewhere), and our day to day practice as specialists in IP, internet law, IT and E-business law.

Read more...
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>

Results 1 - 18 of 299
Main Menu
Home
Profile
Solutions
Projects
People
Library
Training Services
Events
Location Map
Free Tools
Registered Users
Username

Password

Remember me
Lost Password?
No account yet? Register