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PROGRAM 6 MADRID AND LISBON SYSTEMS



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PROGRAM 6 MADRID AND LISBON SYSTEMS



Program Manager Ms. B. Wang

OVERVIEW OF PROGRESS IN 2014





  1. THE MADRID SYSTEM




  1. The geographical expansion of the System saw important positive developments in 2014. In December, Zimbabwe and the Organisation Africaine de la Propriété Intellectuelle (OAPI) acceded to the Madrid Protocol. With OAPI being a 17-country intergovernmental organization, these two accessions alone increased the number of countries in which users can protect and manage their trademarks centrally through the Madrid System from 94 to 110 and thus contributed significantly to the transformation of the System into a truly global system.




  1. Use of the Madrid System also increased in 2014, although at a slower rate than originally anticipated. A record 47,885 applications were received in 2014, representing a 2.3 per cent growth over 2013. The United States of America surpassed Germany as the biggest user of the Madrid System in 2014, further illustrating the transformation of the System.




  1. The discussions in the Working Group on the Legal Development of the Madrid System led to a number of important changes to the Common Regulations, which entered into force in January 2015.  As a result of the changes, a new relief measure entitled “continued processing” is now available to applicants or holders who fail to meet given time limits in specific procedures before the IB. In addition, the renewal procedure has been simplified through the introduction of an option to renew an international registration only for a reduced list of goods and services, rather than having to request the recording of a limitation prior to the renewal, as was previously the case.




  1. The most challenging aspects in 2014 concerned Madrid operational work at the IB. The Madrid Service Orientation Satisfaction Index (Madrid Service Orientation 2014 Survey) improved slightly from 38 to 39. However, a major, long-term reform initiative aimed at improving the maturity level of the operational environment was launched in early 2014 and required the implementation of various new activities and projects, as well as the diversion of certain resources previously dedicated to examination. Consequently, backlogs accumulated in various examination categories (some pre-dating 2014), and other operational delays were incurred, resulting in a number of indicators not being on track. Mitigation measures were put in place, including the retention of a number of additional flexible resources, to allow the IB to improve upon the situation moving forward, while, at the same time, to implement the multiple improvement initiatives still required.




  1. An independent review of the preparations necessary for the deployment of the modernized back office ICT systems supporting the Madrid Registry was undertaken during the third and fourth quarters of 2014. The principle recommendations of the review were the engagement of specialist resources to oversee the deployment from both the business and ICT. As regards the front office ICT systems, work continued as planned, including the deployment of the Madrid eFiling tool in the Benelux Office for Intellectual Property (BOIP), the evolution of additional Madrid System web forms and enhanced functionalities in the ROMARIN search system.




  1. THE LISBON SYSTEM




  1. The Assembly of the Lisbon Union mandated the Working Group on the Development of the Lisbon System, in 2009, to engage in a full review of the Lisbon System aimed at making the system more attractive for users and prospective new Members, while preserving its principles and objectives. In view of the progress made by the Working Group, the Lisbon Union Assembly approved in 2013 the convening of a Diplomatic Conference for the Adoption of a Revised Lisbon Agreement on Appellations of Origin and Geographical Indications in 2015. In October 2014, the Working Group finished its preparatory work for a New Act of the Lisbon Agreement on Appellations of Origin and Geographical Indications, and the Preparatory Committee decided that the Diplomatic Conference be convened in Geneva from May 11 to 21, 2015.

  2. The Lisbon Registry received 80 new applications for the registration of appellations of origin, 26 statements of grant of protection and 15 refusal declarations, which amounts to an overall total of 121 transactions. The total number of registrations in force increased in 2014 to 896 from 809 in 2013. Of these, 78 originated from developing countries or LDCs (14 in the Arab region; 22 in Asia and the Pacific; and 42 in Latin America and the Caribbean).




  1. The number of competent authorities that had given their consent to the use of electronic means for communications under the procedures of the Lisbon System increased to 24 from 23 in 2013. The electronic interface linking the International Register and the Lisbon Express database on the WIPO website was completed and deployed in 2014. The notifications procedure was further streamlined through the use of the WIPO Inquiry Notification System (WINS). Further development towards an electronic system for the generation of notification letters is planned for 2015.




  1. As regards raising awareness of the Lisbon System, the IB organized and/or participated in five information and promotion events with a specific focus on the Lisbon System, including its planned revision, in all regions.




  1. The design, planning and implementation of activities by Program 6 were informed and guided by the relevant DA Recommendations, in particular Recommendations 1 and 6. In addition, the legislative assistance provided to Member States was development-oriented, balanced and tailored to unique Member State requests, in accordance with the DA principles (Recommendation 13), and bearing in mind the applicable flexibilities relevant to countries at differing levels of development (Recommendations 14 and 17).

PERFORMANCE DATA




Expected Result: II.6 Wider and better use of the Madrid & Lisbon Systems, including by developing countries and LDCs

Performance Indicators

Baselines

Targets

Performance Data

TLS

Expansion of geographical coverage (Madrid)

Updated Baseline end 2013:

92 Contracting Parties to the Madrid System(end 2013)


Original Baseline P&B 2014/15:

The number of Contracting Parties at the end of 2013



A total of 100 Contracting Parties by end of 2015

94 Contracting Parties to the Madrid System (2 additional Contracting Parties in 2014: OAPI and Zimbabwe)

On track

Expansion of geographical coverage (Lisbon)

Updated Baseline end 2013: 28 (end 2013)
Original Baseline P&B 2013/14:

28 (April 2013)



32

No new Contracting Parties

Not
on track


Adoption of provisions streamlining or modernizing the Lisbon System legal framework

Updated Baseline end 2013: A revision of the Lisbon Agreement and amendments to the Lisbon Regulations are in preparation in the Working Group on the Development of the Lisbon System.
Original Baseline P&B 2013/14:

Lisbon Agreement, Regulations and Administrative Instructions in force at the end of 2013



Revision of the Lisbon Agreement and amendments to the Regulations and Administrative Instructions

The Working Group finished its preparatory work for a New Act of the Lisbon Agreement on Appellations of Origin and Geographical Indications, and the Preparatory Committee decided that the Diplomatic Conference be convened in Geneva from May 11 to 21, 2015.

On track

No. of International Applications (Madrid)

Updated Baseline end 2013:

44,018 (2012)

46,829 (2013)
Original Baseline P&B 2014/15:

The number of International Applications at the end of 2013



8.1% increase by end of 2015

A record 47,885 International Applications received in 2014, representing a 2.3% increase compared to 2013.

Not
on track


Share of Offices concerned providing updated information on the Madrid System


Share of such Offices providing such information


Increased share




Dis-continued

Expected Result: II.6 Wider and better use of the Madrid & Lisbon Systems, including by developing countries and LDCs
















% of participants in Lisbon System events satisfied and reporting enhanced awareness post an event

Updated Baseline end 2013: Evaluation questionnaires showed a satisfaction rate of more than 90%
Original Baseline P&B 2013/14:

No. of events and % of satisfied participants in 2013



At least eight events with 85% of participants satisfied

Five information and promotion events with a specific focus on the Lisbon System, including its planned revision, in all regions with 84% of participants satisfied

On track

No. and proportion of Lisbon registrations in force from developing countries and LDCs

Updated Baseline end 2013: 67 out of 816
Original Baseline P&B 2013/14:

67 (out of 809) (April 2013)



80 (out of 825)

78 (out of 896):

  • Arab (14)

  • Asia and the Pacific (22)

  • Latin America and the Caribbean (42)

On track

Decrease in the number of irregularities (Madrid)

Updated Baseline end 2013:

2013: 36%


Original Baseline P&B 2014/15:

Irregular applications 34% (in 2012)



Decrease in the number of irregularities by 10%

2014: 36%

Not
on track


Expected Result: II.7 Improved productivity and service quality of Madrid & Lisbon operations

Performance Indicators

Baselines

Targets

Performance Data

TLS

Progress towards streamlining and simplification of the Madrid System legal framework

Madrid System Common Regulations and Administrative Instructions in force at the end of 2013

Amendments to the Madrid System Common Regulations and Administrative Instructions

Amendments to the Common Regulations approved by Madrid Union Assembly in 2014 and to be implemented by Jan 1, 2015

On track

No. of registrations

No. of renewals processed

No. of modifications, including subsequent designations (Madrid)


Updated Baseline end 2013:
2013: 44,414 registrations;

23,014 renewals;

117,673 modifications including 14,373 subsequent designations
Original Baseline P&B 2013/14:

Registrations, renewals (See Annex VII).

97,500 modifications were inscribed in the Registry (2012)


2014: 6.3% increase in registrations and renewals

2015: 3.3% increase in registrations and renewals

Total registrations 92,500.

Total renewals 49,000

Total modifications 200,000, including 35,000 subsequent designations


1.1% increase in registrations and renewals:

  • 42,430 registrations

  • 25,729 renewals

99,558 modifications including 15,824 subsequent designations



Not
on track

Not

on track

On track


Translation of applications in a timely manner (Madrid)

data not available

Four weeks

Average processing time is 3 weeks

On track

Decrease in the number of corrections (Madrid)

Updated Baseline end 2013: 2013: 5,197 corrections received and

4,499 processed


Original Baseline P&B 2013/14: Corrections figures in 2012 ( 5,000 requests)


Decrease corrections by 10%

2014: 6,073 corrections received and

5,737 processed



Not
on track






Performance Indicators

Baselines

Targets

Performance Data

TLS

Improved client satisfaction (Madrid)

Updated Baseline end 2013:

Service Orientation Index 38


Original Baseline P&B 2013/14: Customer Service Orientation Survey 2012. Service Orientation Index 7912.


Higher satisfaction rate in the next Survey, focusing on responsiveness and timeliness

2014: Service Orientation Index 39

On track

Increased use of electronic exchange (Madrid)

Updated Baseline end 2013:

67% of documents received electronically


158,717 email notifications
714 MPM Clients
16 Offices sending XML
Original Baseline P&B 2013/14:

60% of documents received electronically; 85,000 marks notified by email; 200 clients using the MPM; 17 Offices sending applications in XML



70% of documents received electronically; 110,000 marks notified by email; 1,000 clients using the MPM; 23 Offices sending applications in XML

70% of documents received electronically

220,000 email notifications

1,800 MPM Clients

17 Offices sending XML





On track

On track
On track
Not
on track



Refinement of the electronic means of communication and publication under the Lisbon procedures

The electronic means in place at the end of 2013

Electronic filing system and incorporation of the Lisbon Bulletin into the Lisbon Express database

Streamlined procedure for notifications implemented via the WIPO Inquiry Notification System (WINS) notification system.


On track

Refinement of the electronic International Register of the Lisbon System

Updated Baseline end 2013: IT applications for an electronic International Register in use since the Summer 2013
Original Baseline P&B 2013/14:

The electronic International Register (to be) established in 2013



Electronic system linking International Register and Lisbon Express database on the WIPO website

Electronic interface linking the International Register and Lisbon Express database on the WIPO website was completed and deployed in 2014,

On track

RESOURCE UTILIZATION


Budget and Actual Expenditure (by result)

(in thousands of Swiss francs)

Budget and Actual Expenditure (personnel and non-personnel)



(in thousands of Swiss francs)


NOTE: The 2014/15 Budget after Transfers reflects transfers as of March 31, 2015 to address needs during the 2014/15 biennium in line with Financial Regulation 5.5.

A. Budget after Transfers 2014/15




  1. The Budget after Transfers under Result II.6 (Wider and better use of the Madrid and Lisbon Systems) reflects an upward adjustment primarily due to the expansion of the Madrid Fellowship Program.




  1. The shift from personnel to non-personnel resources in the 2014/15 Budget after Transfers reflects a move towards move flexible and agile resourcing of Madrid Operations as part of the Madrid Reform initiative.

B. Budget utilization 2014




  1. Budget utilization is within the expected range of 40-60 per cent for the first year of the biennium and is on track.



Program 6 Annex: Indicators of Madrid Operations


PERFORMANCE INDICATORS FOR THE EXPECTED RESULT



“IMPROVED PRODUCTIVITY AND SERVICE QUALITY OF MADRID OPERATIONS”


  1. As background for the performance indicators for the expected result “improved productivity and service quality of Madrid operations”, the evolution of the following factors needs to be considered:




  • Madrid workloads;

  • Composition of those workloads;

  • Number of staff assigned to process those workloads;

  • Level of automation; and

  • Total cost of production.




  1. Incoming documents




  1. The International Bureau (IB) receives six different categories of documents, namely international applications, renewals, subsequent designations, modifications, decisions and corrections. The latest trend for each of these documents is presented below. Additional information on applications, such as their average number of classes and average number of words is also provided. For technical reasons, some indicators show data based on processed documents rather than on incoming documents. Backlogs in processing may therefore affect some indicators.


International applications




  • The IB received 47,885 applications in 2014, representing an increase of 2.3 per cent compared to 2013.

  • The numbers of applications received have increased continuously since 2010.


Distribution of applications by language of filing


  • In 2014, 80 per cent of all applications were filed in English. This share grew by 15 percentage points from 65 per cent in 2008 to 80 per cent in 2014.



Average number of designations per registration



  • An average 6.9 designations were made in applications registered in 2014.

  • The average number of designations per registration has remained almost unchanged since 2010.

Average number of classes per registration



  • On average, 2.5 classes were specified in all applications registered in 2014.


Average length of applications


  1. The length of an application is determined by the total number of words used by applicants to describe their mark, by the basic list of goods and services and by any accompanying limitations. These three elements are translated by the IB into two languages (English, French or Spanish).




  1. The length of applications has an impact on the workload of examiners, which includes classifying the goods and/or services in the application according to the Nice Classification.




  1. The average length of an application is determined by the total number of words in basic lists of goods and services, limitations and descriptions divided by the number of applications registered.




  • In 2014, the average length of an application was 239 words. This represents an increase of 12 per cent compared to 2013.

  • While certain aspects of the translation and classification work are automated, significant increases in the length of applications has a large impact on the workload of the IB.



Distribution of regular and irregular applications



  • The share of regular applications has remained more or less the same since 2011.


Renewals



  • In 2014, the IB registered 25,729 renewals, up 12 per cent from 2013.

  • Despite the increase in renewals between 2009 and 2014, the numbers of renewals processed manually have remained relatively stable. In 2014, 59 per cent of renewals were processed automatically.

Subsequent Designations




  • In 2014, the IB recorded 17,316 subsequent designations, down 2.5 per cent from 2013.

  • In 2014, a new web form called E-Subsequent Designation was made available to applicants. This electronic form enabled the IB to process 14 per cent of all subsequent designations automatically.



Modifications



  • In 2014, the IB received 38,817 requests for modification, up 5.5 per cent from 2013.

Decisions



  • In 2014, the number of decisions registered decreased by 0.3 per cent compared to 2013, totaling 521,208. The number of decisions processed has rapidly increased since 2010.

  • In 2014, 62 per cent of decisions were processed automatically. The majority of decisions have been processed automatically since 2011.


Corrections



  • In 2014, the IB recorded approximately 6,000 corrections. This represents an increase of 17 per cent compared to 2013.

  1. Total workload




  1. The total workload represents the weighted total number of documents processed by the IB. All six categories of documents are included (applications, renewals, subsequent designations, modifications, decisions and corrections).




  1. As processing these types of documents do not require equal resources, they are each weighted differently. According to this weighted system, during the time required to process an international application, an examiner can process 1.6 renewals, 1.8 subsequent designations, 1.8 modifications or 10 decisions. Similarly, during the time required to process an international application, an employee involved in the automation process can be deemed to process 17 documents.




  • In 2014, the total workload remained stable compared to 2013. Applications, decisions and modifications represented nearly 80 per cent of the total workload.

  • Between 2011 and 2013, the workload increased sharply, mainly due to the increasing number of decisions.



  1. Medium of Transmission of Incoming Documents




  • In 2014, 66 per cent of all incoming documents were transmitted electronically to the IB.

  • The share of documents transmitted electronically has been stable since 2012.




  1. Processing


Total cost of production


  1. The total cost of production has direct and indirect components. Direct costs reflect expenditure incurred by the IB in administering the Madrid System (such as management, translation and registration). Indirect costs reflect expenditure for supporting activities (such as those associated with buildings and information technology). Indirect costs are weighted to take into account only the share attributable to the Madrid System.



  • The total cost of production is estimated at 41.8 million Swiss francs in 2014. This represents a slight increase of 0.1 per cent compared to 2013.



  • In 2014, the direct costs accounted for 61 per cent of total costs.



Unit cost


  1. The IB’s efficiency in processing transactions can be measured by the unit cost, defined as the average cost of producing one unit of output.




  1. As the IB registers new applications and maintains existing registrations, it is relevant to have a unit of output which includes a set of transactions. Two unit cost indicators are presented below using two different units of output.




  1. As part of the IB’s efforts to continuously refine the methodology for calculating unit costs, the methodology has been revised in the Program and Budget 2016/17 to reflect more accurately the cost of processing Madrid workloads at the IB:




  • The methodology for calculating direct and indirect Madrid costs have been aligned with the methodologies for calculating PCT and the Hague unit costs.




  • A weighted system has been introduced to better approximate the actual work required to process the six categories of documents, taking into account that certain of these documents are more labor-intensive than others.13




  • The first unit cost has been redefined to include only new international registrations and renewals (the unit cost in the Program and Budget 2014/15 also included subsequent designations). The rationale for removing subsequent designations as a component of this unit cost is a sharper focus on the core Madrid outputs, namely the international registration and its renewal. All other Madrid transactions (subsequent designations, modifications, decisions and corrections) can be considered secondary to these two core transactions. Furthermore, there is no real justification for including one of these secondary transactions as a component of unit costs, while not including the others.




  • The second unit cost is based on the number of documents inscribed in the register rather than the number of inscriptions due to the different levels of efforts required to process the various documents.




  1. For ease of comparison, the graphs below depict the evolution of the two unit costs from 2008 to 2014 using the old methodology and from 2012 to 2014 using the new methodology, including a breakdown of the contribution of direct and indirect costs.


Unit cost per new/renewed international registration


  1. New international registrations consist of applications that are registered within a given year, and renewed international registrations consist of existing registrations that are renewed within a given year. Combined, these two types of transactions reflect the core business of the IB.




  1. As processing these two types of transactions do not require equal resources, they are each weighted differently. 14 The unit cost is calculated by dividing the total cost of production by the number of new/renewed international registrations.




Old method

New method








  • The average cost of processing a new/renewed international registration was 837 Swiss francs in 2014. This represents an increase of 2.6 per cent compared to 2013. The increase was mainly due to a processing cost that remained relatively stable, combined with a decrease of 4.5 per cent in the number of international applications registered.


Unit cost per document inscribed in the register


  1. The documents inscribed in the register correspond to the total volume of workload (see “Total volume of workload” above).




Old method

New method








  • The average cost of inscribing a document in the register increased slightly from 320 Swiss francs in 2012 to 322 Swiss francs in 2014.



  1. Productivity of examination




  1. The definition of examination productivity is the number of new/renewed international registrations processed by examiners divided by the number of personnel involved in examination. The number of personnel includes fellows, interns and external contractors.





  • The productivity of examination remained relatively stable in 2014 compared to 2013.



  1. Personnel





  • The number of staff has remained relatively stable since 2010, while the number of flexible resources has increased from 1 in 2012 to 12 in 2014.

  • Personnel of outsourcing companies not working on WIPO premises are not included in this indicator.




  1. Pendency




  1. The average pendency for each of the six transactions performed by the IB is shown below. The pendency is calculated from the date a document is received to the date it is inscribed.



















  • Compared to 2013, the average pendency in 2014 increased for applications, corrections, modifications and subsequent designations. The average pendency time for renewals remained stable, whereas that for decisions decreased for the second consecutive year.

  • Improving and stabilizing pendency across all transactions is a major objective of the IB.




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