Working With Us

Becoming a Patent Attorney

Whether you are in your final years at university or whether you are looking for a change in career, the following steps provide guidance as to how you may attain professional qualification in the intellectual property arena.

Phillips Ormonde Fitzpatrick hires both qualified patent attorneys and people seeking this qualification.

In order to become a patent attorney, a science or engineering degree is required. This is a requirement set by the Professional Standards Board for Patent and Trademark Attorneys. It is also very helpful to have a PHD.

You must be a person of good character, and you must not have committed an offence against Intellectual Property legislation in the last five years.

 

Study

You are required to study 9 subjects related to intellectual property in order to qualify. These subjects are undertaken usually via an “intensive” course over about one week, commonly through the University of Melbourne or Monash University.

 

Registering as a Patent Attorney

For registration as a patent attorney, a person must meet requirements 1 and 2 above as well as have been employed in a position that provides experience in all areas of patent attorney work.

You must have had two years of employment in an intellectual property practice, and must have had exposure to a number of different skills that are required of a patent attorney.

Application for registration as a patent attorney is made to the Professional Standards Board for Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys. 

 

What Our Staff Say

 

Joe Mok

Patent Attorney, Sydney

Joe joined Phillips Ormonde Fitzpatrick in 2009, and is a member of the firm’s EPIT (Electronics, Physics and Information Technology) Group. He has developed experience working with clients in wide-ranging industries such as e-commerce, telecommunications, banking, mining, advertising, gaming technology, animal health, medical devices and semiconductor fabrication.

“I enjoy the challenge of meeting with clients, learning about their business and innovations and providing advice and key IP services. Whether it’s drafting patent specifications, working out filing strategies or talking through how to protect a clients’ carefully crafted IP, I find the work interesting and rewarding and you never know just what new technology is around the corner!”