IPWatchdog Unleashed
Each week we journey into the world of intellectual property to discuss the law, news, policy and politics of innovation, technology, and creativity. With analysis and commentary from industry thought leaders and newsmakers from around the world, IPWatchdog Unleashed is hosted by world renowned patent attorney and founder of IPWatchdog.com, Gene Quinn.
IPWatchdog Unleashed
WIPO in Focus: Beyond Treaties, Toward a Market-Driven IP System
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The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) has been undergoing a quiet but meaningful transformation over the last 5-plus years. From a more traditional UN-style body into a service-driven, operationally focused global IP platform, WIPO is helping the entire global IP community. As Lisa Jorgenson, who is a Deputy Director of WIPO, explained in her recent conversation with Gene Quinn, the organization’s fee-based funding model fundamentally reshapes its priorities—forcing it to operate with a customer-centric mindset more akin to a business than a government agency. This shift is driving changes across the organization, including modernization of internal systems, a stronger emphasis on user engagement, and a move toward tailored, country-specific support rather than one-size-fits-all policy prescriptions.
At the core of this evolution is the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), which WIPO is repositioning not just as a filing mechanism, but as a strategic tool for managing uncertainty in a rapidly changing global economy. Both Quinn and Jorgenson emphasized that companies continue to underutilize the flexibility the PCT provides—particularly the 30-month window to evaluate markets, adjust supply chains, and make more informed investment decisions. In response, WIPO is investing in outreach, addressing user misconceptions about cost and complexity, and redesigning its service model to better support high-volume users through more direct and proactive engagement.
Looking forward, WIPO is aligning itself with the major forces reshaping the innovation ecosystem, including artificial intelligence, data governance, and the increasing complexity of global IP transactions. The organization is embedding AI into its own operations, expanding its role in areas such as standard essential patents (SEPs) and dispute resolution, and developing new infrastructure initiatives like a global patent assignment system. Taken together, these efforts reflect a broader strategic objective: positioning WIPO not just as a facilitator of international IP frameworks, but as a forward-looking platform capable of helping stakeholders navigate—and capitalize on—structural change in the global innovation economy.
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