Kyocera Corporation (President: Goro Yamaguchi) announced that it was recognized as one of the
2015 Top 100 Global Innovators by Thomson Reuters
,
a worldwide provider of intelligent information for business
enterprises and professionals, for the second consecutive year. Kyocera
was highly recognized for its patent success rate and global reach; a
trophy was presented at the company’s headquarters in Kyoto, Japan.
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Junichi Jinno, General Manager of
Corporate Legal and Intellectual Property Group at Kyocera (left)
receiving the trophy from Mr. Hirofumi Hino, Vice President and Head of
Japan Professional Services IP & Science, at Thomson Reuters (right)
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The Thomson Reuters Top 100 Global Innovators awards have been presented
annually since 2011 to recognize organizations at the center of global
innovation by analyzing their developments in intellectual property and
patents based on Thomson Reuters’ data and original methodology.
The basic policy of the Kyocera Group is to safeguard the yields of
research and development as intellectual property rights and to respect
the intellectual property rights of others. Kyocera’s activities
relating to intellectual property resulted in a high success rate. In
addition, Kyocera emphasizes foreign patents since its business is
expanding globally. The company holds a Global Intellectual Property
Partners Meeting, which is a joint gathering for patent offices in the
U.S., Europe, China, Korea, Japan and the Group’s staff in charge of
intellectual property, to discuss various topics about intellectual
property including patent application specifications and specific case
examples. Currently, the company has two overseas branches for
intellectual property in the U.S. and China and will open a new branch
in Europe in April 2016.
“We are grateful to be named a 2015 Top 100 Global Innovator for the
second consecutive year, which is in part due to the consistent support
of our patent & law firms and each of our product divisions,” said
Junichi Jinno, Senior Executive Officer and General Manager of Corporate
Legal and Intellectual Property Group. “Innovation continues to be a
vital company asset and these influential patents are important to
protect further global business development.”
About the Thomson Reuters 2015 Top 100 Global Innovators
Research and analysis were performed utilizing Thomson Reuters Derwent World Patents Index
® (DWPI
SM), Derwent Patents Citation Index
® and Thomson Innovation
®,
a premier IP intelligence and collaboration platform. The methodology
to identify the Top 100 Global Innovators included four principal
criteria.
1. Volume
All organizations with 100 or more patented new inventions in the past five years are included in the analysis.
2. Success rate
The analysis measures the ratio of inventions described in published
applications (those patents which are filed and publicly published by
the patent office but not yet granted) to inventions protected with
granted patents in the past five years.
3. Global reach
The global reach of inventions is analyzed by calculating the number of
basic inventions that have quadrilateral patents in their patent
families in China, Europe, Japan and the United States.
4. Influence
The number of citations to the organization’s patents by other companies
is counted over the most recent five years, excluding self citations.