Conference: Big data and how it will drive growth
Companies need to make better use of databases to sharpen their edge in innovation, experts said at the Patent Information Annual Conference of China in Beijing last week.
"In the era of big data, holding comprehensive and accurate information means having access to a core asset," Bai Guangqing, president of the Intellectual Property Publishing House, told China Daily during the meeting.
"In the sea of information, how to discover relationships between various data and increase data mining efficiency through IT is the key to helping improve R&D."
With some 90 percent of technology information available in patent documentation worldwide, tapping into vast patent databases is an inevitable path to innovation, Bai said.
More foreign companies are eyeing China's information service market after the country became largest patent filing powerhouse in the world, he said.
The trend is reflected in expansion of the conference itself. Founded in 2010, the event this year attracted 1,500 representatives from the domestic and overseas business communities, its largest-ever corporate participation.
Many arrived from abroad - both service providers and users - a reflection of growing demand from overseas, Bai said.
The publishing house president said half of his company's yearly revenue is from overseas orders. Now about 20 million yuan ($3.3 million) for the year, the company's revenues are growing 20 to 30 percent annually, a rate he predicted will continue to accelerate.
At the same time, domestic companies now place a higher value on patent information as innovation heats up, partly due to a series of government policies, said Bai.
In comparison with mature overseas markets, domestic big data and analysis still need fostering, experts said.
The value of the information market will surpass 3.2 trillion yuan in 2015, according to projections by the State Council released in mid-August.
The burgeoning demand will generate at least 1.2 trillion yuan in other sectors, the report said.
Meng Xiantang, deputy director-general of the High-tech Industry Department at the National Development and Reform Commission, told the conference the global economy is still sluggish in the aftermath of the financial turmoil that began in 2008.
"New demand (for information) can be an emerging engine in the recovery," Meng said.
Efforts by various governments to stimulate their economies focus on technological innovation and emerging industries, he said.
Now in a key stage of industrialization and urbanization, China faces challenges and opportunities with industrial restructuring and changes in what powers growth.
"We need to upgrade to an economy driven by innovation rather than by investment or resources," he said.
"With further globalization of economies and technology, there will be a marked increase in demand for patent information, which as a strategic resource for innovation is playing an increasingly important role in improving competitiveness," he said.
Tian Lipu, commissioner of the State Intellectual Property Office, said at the conference that China's national IP strategy that began in 2008 "has injected vigor into innovation and enabled a rapid increase in IP creation nationwide".
The country had an inventory of 1.1 million invention patents by the end of last year, 430,000 of them granted to domestic applicants.
The number of international patent filings from China now ranks fourth in the world, according to statistics from the World Intellectual Property Organization.
Commissioner Tian noted the significance of international cooperation in IP, especially in sharing and exchanging patent information services.
David Kappos, former director of the US Patent and Trademark Office and now partner of Gravath, Swaine&Moore LLP, said "the dynamics of our economic landscape may be shifting, but the importance of IP is not".
"IP is a premier, global currency for creating value for services and products for all innovators in all markets and all countries," he said.
In the United States alone, IP created 40 million jobs and 61 percent of merchandise exports, Kappos said, citing a US report.
Chinese and US IP systems represent two of the largest filing offices in the world and the two countries need to expand cooperation, he said.
"The US and China must continue finding new ways to engage in one another, to develop constructive, cooperative solutions and build an IP system adaptable to the demands of management, rules and laws, transparency, and the free flow of information," Kappos said.