Understanding Your Market: Data Centres
In this edition of Understanding Your Market, we highlight the benefits of IAC’s patent landscape reports to help companies in the data-driven cleantech sector achieve market-level success.
What are patent landscape reports?
Before we can talk about data centres, let’s first define a patent landscape report. Developed by IAC’s team of experts, these reports are a reflection of patent right surveys in a defined group of technologies. IAC’s patent landscape reports are the ‘who’s who’ in a given competitive space.
To help make it easier to understand, let’s use sports as an analogy. IAC’s patent landscape reports tell you:
- “Who is in the game”: what companies hold some patent rights.
- “Who is on the sidelines”: what companies exist within the market but are still waiting for their opportunity to enter the game.
Awareness of the competitive landscape can impact much-needed intelligence that identifies strengths and weaknesses of a firm, opportunities that lie ahead and threats in the market.
What are data centres?
A data centre is a large group of networked computer servers typically used by organizations for the remote storage, processing or distribution of large amounts of data. They are central to the critical digital infrastructure supporting advanced knowledge-based economies.
In this digital age, exponential growth in computing workloads, driven by a massive rise in global data consumption, has led to a significant increase in the number of data centres worldwide.
What challenges are data centres solving?
Data centres act as a central host to an organization’s critical and proprietary applications as well as its data, making them vital to the operation and continuance of services for modern day organizations.
Due to the growing need for digitization and high computing applications, organizations are moving away from their traditional on-site data management architecture in favour of multi-cloud and hybrid environments, managed by third-parties. This gives organizations the flexibility to scale their infrastructure without having to worry about physical space and servicing legacy software to ensure it works alongside modern applications.
What are the emerging trends and opportunities in the data centres sector that could have an impact on your company’s growth?
Exploring the trends and technological shifts within the data centre sector, IAC identified three key insights for Canadian companies to consider.
1. There is an increasing dependence on digital infrastructure
COVID-19’s effect on day-to-day business has definitely accelerated the need for organizations to deliver products or services online.
A Synergy Research survey reported an 18 per cent rise in data centres from 2019 – 2020, which is projected to further increase due to COVID-19. This increase in demand can be seen through infrastructural investments, mergers, and acquisitions by what are called hyperscalers — facilities designed to support robust applications and enable scalability for companies.
2. Canada’s data centres growth is forecasted to double each year
Canada is currently ranked fifth in data centre density, with 279 hosted nationwide (Source: Globe and Mail). With increased growth forecasted, businesses focused on data centres and related technologies can expect exponential growth year over year.
Thanks to its colder climate, there are added benefits for Canada. One of the largest costs of maintaining data centres is managing the rise in temperature due to the amount of computing. Data centres situated in climates such as Canada’s can leverage the much cheaper cool air and water as the primary cooling method.
3. Energy-efficient data centre technologies reduce environmental impacts
Data centre can act as a central host for a company’s critical and proprietary applications and having this information offsite introduces the benefits of cloud computing. Companies benefit by not having to worry about upgrading their systems to keep up with modernization and demand. And, they can utilize multiple data centres to harness the power and efficiency available. This is known as a multi-cloud workspace. Both cloud and multi-cloud workspaces are attractive options to companies looking to streamline their data management and reduce their on-site infrastructure.
Co-location and multi-tenant data centres can also host many organizations at once, making them a more environmentally conscious option than companies having their own individual infrastructure. In recent years, data centres have also become more efficient, with a renewed focus on using energy efficient solutions to optimize utilization of compute and storage resources, adopting sustainable cooling techniques and opting for cleaner sources of energy.
Conclusion
This article scratches the surface. IAC’s patent landscape report offers invaluable insights to help support your company’s growth:
- Major players and opportunities for new entrants to enter the sector
- Market risks and how these can be mitigated
- Partnership opportunities between the private-sector, their peers, and the government
IAC’s data centre patent landscape report goes into deeper detail and provides statistics to unlock the opportunities in this sector. These detailed reports are available exclusively to IAC members.
To learn more about becoming an IAC member, contact Rasha Shamat, IAC’s Business Development Manager, at rshamat@ipcollective.ca.
The Power of the Collective
IAC’s patent landscape reports are detailed and comprehensive, ranging from 100 – 130 pages in length, and provide data and patent information that identify gaps and trends to help companies better understand risks and opportunities to make informed decisions to scale and grow.
Requiring hours of research and analysis, each report would cost more than $60K if commissioned by an individual business and are available exclusively for IAC Members. The expertise used to create these reports is unique to IAC and speaks to the benefit of IAC as a collective.
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IAC’s Response to the 2022 Federal Budget
On April 7, 2022, Canada’s Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland tabled the federal government’s 2022 budget. In response to this announcement, Mike McLean, CEO of the Innovation Asset Collective, issued the following statement:
I want to congratulate the Government of Canada on today’s budget. They have prioritized the importance of investing in the clean-energy market and building a world-class intellectual property regime.
Building on previous investments, the Government will provide $96.6M over five years and $22.9M ongoing to further improve Canada’s intellectual property performance.
Today’s budget also identified a green transition as one its three key pillars and allocated $12.4B in funding over the next five years to support measures including incentives to increase the use of hydrogen and renewable fuels, get Canadians and businesses to shift to zero-emission vehicles and tax credits for investments in clean technology.
Canada has some of the best talent and expertise in the cleantech sector and the direction provided in today’s budget will present an enormous opportunity to advance this country’s economic growth and a green transition in key sectors including transportation and agriculture.
A key pillar of the Government’s first IP strategy, IAC is a centralized and cost-effective steward of the Government’s investment, with a focus on the long-term sustainability and growth of Canada’s innovation economy.
As an independent patent collective, we are focused on providing companies in the data-driven cleantech sector with better access to IP resources to take control of their innovations. This includes developing IP sophistication, building IP assets and growing the economy to fulfill Canada’s clean-tech innovation potential.
The results of IAC’s work are helping to cement Canada’s reputation as a world-class IP commercializing nation, now and for generations to come. Today’s budget supports the work of IAC and confirms this Government’s commitment to building capacity in Canada’s innovation economy.
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A Guide to All Things IP with IAC: Episode 2
This week on A Guide to All Things IP with IAC, we delve deeper into the technical aspects of IAC’s patent landscape reports in addition to the data contained within them.
In the last installment of our two-part spotlight on patent landscape reports, we explain how we created the taxonomy and value chain for our report on Smart Grids.
We also take a look at risks and opportunities along with the filing trends that were identified.
To learn more about IAC’s Patent Landscape Reports click here.
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A Guide to All Things IP with IAC: Episode 1
The Innovation Asset Collective is launching a new podcast this year titled “A Guide to All Things IP with IAC”.
The aim of this podcast is to highlight key IP-related information in a concise and easy-to-digest way so that it can then be leveraged by SMEs to achieve market-level success.
In this first installment of a two-part spotlight on patent landscape reports, we summarize what these reports are and the value that the data within them offers to SMEs who are looking to improve their existing IP strategy.
In part two of this spotlight next week we will delve deeper into the technical aspects of the patent landscape reports that have been produced by IAC to date.
To learn more about IAC’s Patent Landscape Reports click here.
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Who’s Who in the IP Zoo: Putting Patent Landscape Reports to work
Patent landscape reports are a very useful tool for businesses, but how? That is the focus of this article: to explain why these reports are valuable and how a small or medium-sized business (SME) can leverage the data in them to achieve market-level success.
Before we can talk about the value of patent landscape reports it’s important to understand what they are and why the large body of research actually exists. Simply put, it is a survey of patent rights in a defined group of technologies. These reports are your ‘who’s who’ of a given competitive space.
For those who aren’t familiar with landscape reports, their utility can be explained by using board games as an analogy. These reports tell you who is in the game (those who hold some patent rights), who is on the sidelines (those who are in the market but don’t have many pieces on the board), and combined with a competitive landscape analysis, can highlight opportunities in the space that might not have been apparent otherwise. In business terms, the report tells the reader who the patent holders are within a specific technology space as well as who the key players are in that competitive landscape.
The datasets in these landscape reports provide both a birds-eye view of a competitive landscape and insight into what strategies other competitors in the market are potentially employing. The landscape presented in these reports showcases the pace of patent filings and other activities happening in a particular patent technology space.
Why should you care about the pace of patent filings in a certain competitive landscape? By looking at these filings and what specific technologies they are related to, we can identify filing trends.
You might be thinking, “okay, but why should I care about what the filing trends are?” To use another board game analogy, imagine that you are playing the game ‘Battleship’ against a friend. For those that have never played this game before, each player has 5 ships that they place on their individual board and the aim of the game is to guess where your opponent’s ships are located on their board. In this case, filing trends would be the equivalent of being given strong hints about where you friend’s ships are located.
These filing trends can be used as indicators of what the IP Strategy may be for individual competitors in a given market and they can also reveal underdeveloped technology segments. This is helpful as a starting point for further analysis and informing next steps around business opportunities, roadblocks, and areas for further review.
Now that we understand what patent landscape reports are used for, we now need to talk about why you should use them. The objective in building these reports is to paint an overall picture within a technology sector. This helps SMEs (you) highlight emerging trends, identify key areas of development, and find white spaces. For those wondering, the term ‘white spaces’ is used to describe opportunities in a technology sector. These opportunities can come in the form of an underdeveloped technology segment or innovation to an existing segment that has not yet been implemented.
Patent landscape reports also provide commentary on other organizations and their innovation tactics by looking at the strategies that have been adopted in different market areas.
At Innovation Asset Collective, our patent landscape reports help our members better understand their competitive positioning compared to existing patent owners and market leaders. The goal, through these reports, is to inform research and development direction, IP generation opportunities, and accelerated insights to guide an overall business strategy. The findings in these reports can also provide information that both supports and drives your current IP strategy.
What you are looking for in a patent landscape report will have an impact on the lens with which you analyze one through. It goes without saying, but it is difficult to find something if you do not know what you are looking for. Keeping this in mind, you must first understand what information you want to know before reading or commissioning a patent landscape report.
One important thing to know about patent landscape reports is while they can be a valuable business tool, they are also both costly and time consuming to create. The broader the landscape; the more expensive it will be to have a report commissioned.
When creating a patent landscape report, you could say that the data is in the details. The way in which data is organized is key, as it will inform you of the scope and the outcomes of the report. How the patent data is organized in these reports is just as important as the data itself. It defeats the intended purpose of a patent landscape report if the data is not organized in a way that extracts the most relevant information for the reader.
Performing quality landscape studies requires a high level of expertise and understanding in this area. Taxonomy creation and data collection require a systematic approach. One of the limiting factors for SMEs to perform landscape studies in-house is the lack of expertise in this area.
The word ‘taxonomy’ refers to a system of classification in which research findings are organized to provide a better understanding of an industry and its different segments. Using another analogy; the categories that are created when the taxonomy of a report is being established are like the different colours of paint that make up a bigger picture. Though we create the categories by which data is organized, they already exist within the space that the report covers.
When IAC starts preparing a taxonomy, we look at not only the type and scope of patent data we want to collect, but also how the industry is structured. Much market research is completed beforehand to put together a sketch of the taxonomy. Key value chain pieces are identified and help formulate what technology segments are associated with each.
Patent landscape reports act as a broad sweep of the marketplace, which SMEs can use to identify white-space opportunities and upcoming technology trends in a particular space. Exploring the landscape data sets from a business planning perspective requires discussions on topics such as technology areas, the scope of patents searched, the geographic area selected, whether expired patents were identified and if the technology is in the public domain. This is exactly what makes these reports so valuable. Through extensive patent research of a particular space, IAC’s team compiles these reports which contain a host of information that is displayed in an easy-to-read way for SMEs to then apply to their existing IP and business strategies.
IAC Members have the ability to dive deeper into the data sets with the IAC team to extract more detailed information from our reports. IAC can work with your company to help analyze subsets of data from the reports, and develop smaller targeted landscapes that will support your ability to grow and scale. IAC works with our members to better understand their needs and have them reflected in our reports.
For IAC Members, our detailed patent landscape reports can be viewed on our member portal at ipcollective.ca.
If you’d like more information about IAC’s patent landscape reports, or want to learn about IAC Membership, complete the information request form or send an — email directly to Rasha Shamat, IAC’s Business Development Manager at rshamat@ipcollective.ca.
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