Junior

AI Prompting for Patent Prep & Pros

The Latest Techniques Every Patent Practitioner Needs to Know

Gene Quinn

President & CEO

IPWatchdog, Inc.

Yuri Eliezer

Patent Attorney; CEO & Co-founder

Junior

Gideon Myles

Associate General Counsel, Patents and Trademarks

OpenAI

Eric Maschoff

Patent Attorney; Partner

Maschoff Brennan

Matthew Grady

Shareholder

Wolf Greenfield

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the rage. Practically everyone is now using some form of AI, whether for personal use or for business. But the unfortunate reality is that with AI your results may differ—wildly—from others. This isn’t just because some tools and services are more powerful than others, but perhaps even more so due to AI prompting techniques and sophistication.

AI isn’t intuitive. It doesn’t know the law, your client, or your drafting style, unless you tell it. The clearer and more structured your input, the more valuable the output. In other words, success with AI begins with precise prompting.

Join us on Tuesday, November 25 at 12pm ET for a practical session built specifically for patent prosecutors and in-house IP teams. Moderated by Gene Quinn, President and Founder of IPWatchdog, our panel will be: Yuri Eliezer (Junior), Gideon Myles (OpenAI), Eric Maschoff (Maschoff Brennan) and Matthew Grady (Wolf Greenfield).

This panel will roll up our sleeves and show you exactly how to prompt state-of-the-art AI models to accelerate your ability to provide high-quality patent work. You will see prompting demonstrations you can replicate on the job—with your clients’ consent of course! We will discuss prompting tips for each stage of drafting and prosecuting a patent application, how to structure inputs so you receive reliable outputs, and how to keep confidential data as private and siloed when working with public LLM endpoints.

  • Preparing and validating patent claims with guardrail prompts.
  • Checking enablement and written description sufficiency with §112-oriented prompt checklists.
  • Reducing the risk of §101 subject matter eligibility rejections through iterative prompt scaffolds.
  • Differentiating over prior art and within a patent family with claim chart prompts.
  • Mining for continuation and divisional patent claims and alternative embodiments.
  • Mapping claims to products and features to create more valuable patents.

Among other things, you will learn: