Necessity may be the mother of invention. To lure and cultivate corporate investment, a territory’s knack for invention and innovation is a competitive necessity.
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Japan’s total number of USPTO patents in 2020 was more than double the total from No. 2 China.
Photo © Tokyo Convention & Visitors Bureau
Necessity may be the mother of invention. To lure and cultivate corporate investment, a territory’s knack for invention and innovation is a competitive necessity.
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is the place to turn for the data, although it’s easy, as with any giant database, to make a few wrong turns in the process. The Office has been modernizing its data and search capabilities. Last April the agency began issuing electronic patent grants (eGrants), enabling patent owners and the public to view and print issued patents immediately upon issuance. “Since the transition, we have issued over 200,000 eGrants,” the USPTO said last month.
The agency also has unveiled its Patent Public Search tool, a new web-based patent search application that it says will replace internal legacy search tools. You can even choose whether you want to use “Basic Search” or “Advanced Search.”
For the amateur data scientist, even those tools can be intimidating at times, as mysterious acronyms and codes accumulate. So I put a simple question to USPTO staff: How do I find the latest data and historical data on patents by location?
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As USPTO Deputy Press Secretary Mandy Kraft wrote to me after she poked around, there are a few resources to go to, even if it would still “require some work on your end.” For those inclined to evaluate a location’s inherent potential for innovation as a site selection factor, the work is worth it. The work also may provide not only a statistical dimension to a location search, but direct connections to a region’s under-the-radar intellectual property domains.
The first place to turn is the Patent Technology Monitoring Team, whose array of reports about patent activity includes a host of report breakouts by geographic origin. The most recent report by state looks at calendar year 2020, when 183,147 patents were issued within the United States. Patent origin is determined by the residence of the first-named inventor. The USPTO presents the states in alphabetical order, so a simple sort produces these leading states and their number of patents:
You can also find there the numbers of 2020 USPTO patent grants by foreign country. The rest of the world’s USPTO patents in 2020 totaled 205,714, including big numbers from the top locations. Among them is No. 2 China, while the per-capita leader by far is No. 10 Israel, long known for the innovation mindset across its population of 9.3 million:
Dig around a bit more and you can find counts for utility patents (also known as “patents for inventions”) broken out by U.S. metro area, although the most recent data is from 2015. A separate area of data breaks out utility patents by micropolitan areas. Below are the cumulative leaders in both categories for the more than 1.5 million utility patents issued during the 16 years from 2000 through 2015. (Watch for Site Selection’s Top Metros and Top Micropolitans by corporate facility investments in the March 2024 issue of Site Selection to see where there is overlap.) A fun game to play among the micropolitans especially: Can you name the anchor employers or clusters whose patent activity drives each town’s total?
Another comprehensive resource for patent data by location is PatentsView, a project launched in 2012 by a team comprising the USPTO; American Institutes for Research (AIR); University of Massachusetts Amherst; New York University; University of California, Berkeley; Twin Arch Technologies and Periscopic. In addition to analysis by location, the site also features tools to examine relationships to the world’s most influential patents and their companies and countries of origin. Among the most influential? Japan’s Canon Inc., which just this week announced it ranked fifth for the number of U.S. patents awarded in 2023. The maker of printing, imaging, medical and industrial equipment said it is the only company in the world to have ranked in the top five for 38 years running, according to the latest ranking of preliminary patent results issued by IFI CLAIMS Patent Services. — Adam Bruns |
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Between 2000 and 2015, the San Jose metro area was No. 1 in utility patents by a healthy margin of more than 50,000 over No. 2 New York. Photo of San Jose’s SubZERO Festival courtesy of Visit San Jose
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Uncategorized
by Adam Bruns
Necessity may be the mother of invention. To lure and cultivate corporate investment, a territory’s knack for invention and innovation is a competitive necessity.
Read MoreAdam Bruns
Editor in Chief of Site Selection Magazine
Operating by a new playbook, the Framework for Growth, Kansas excels.
Last month's surprising vote to leave the European Union kicked off a market maelstrom — which is settling a little now.
An update on power company–affiliated economic development around the US shows the diverse economic meanings of the word 'utility.'
If every picture tells a story, then every trophy does too.
Project Bulletin
Advanced medical product manufacturer Hollister Incorporated announced a $25 million upgrade to its five-year-old site in Kaunas, Lithuania.
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Long viewed as a system parallel to that of traditional employers, the film and TV production economy has become the new normal for many leading regions.
C all it coincidence, but much attention is being given of late to the importance of competitiveness in the context of economic development, including here at Site Selection. No fewer than three new resources are suddenly at the disposal of corporate real estate executives and others charged with selecting the best location in which to […]
T he corporate real estate industry’s service provider community is in the midst of a heightened state of “convergence” if the past few months are any indication. Late 2000 saw numerous alliances and acquisitions that support a theory put forward in the Site Selection January 2001 cover story, “E-Business Levels the Real Estate Playing Field”. […]
by Ron Starner
From dam removal to new camping sites, outdoor projects receive major funding boost.
Read MoreRon Starner
Executive Vice President of Conway, Inc.
The iconic sneaker seller is trading in the Big Apple for the Sunshine State.
Facility investment and job creation might hinge on an upcoming ruling on steel pipe dumping. Or they might just keep going full steam ahead.
Can natural gas energize the economic development of an entire region?
Want your company to gain a competitive advantage in the marketplace? Throw away every stereotype you have about millennials.
E ast side, west side, biotech research parks are going up all around the town in Baltimore. Two major bio parks are in the works that figure to enhance Maryland’s already strong presence in the field. Maryland’s biotech industry has been ranked as the third most concentrated among U.S. states and includes more than 300 […]
Investment Profile
by Ron Starner
Career prep goes mobile in Pflugerville high schools.
Read MoreRon Starner
Executive Vice President of Conway, Inc.
How a global auto giant and a Bay Area fintech firm fell in love with the Nashville region.
G en. Colin Powell once said, “Don’t be afraid to challenge the pros, even in their own backyard. Learn from the pros, observe them, seek them out as mentors and partners. But remember that even the pros may have leveled out in terms of their learning and skills. Sometimes even the pros can become complacent […]
Could Wisconsin’s plans for high-speed rail and its proximity to U.S. wind corridors have lured two Spain-based firms to Milwaukee
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International Update
Unlocking Opportunities in India’s Renewable Energy Revolution
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The growing trend toward organic food and the increasing need to understand where food comes from isn’t just for humans anymore.
ttracting aviation projects is one of New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson’s economic development goals. That plan received a significant boost in October 2004 with the announcement that American Utilicraft will build a cargo plane assembly plant in Albuquerque. The move adds to the state’s burgeoning cluster at the Double Eagle II Aviation Park. […]
Snapshot
Necessity may be the mother of invention. To lure and cultivate corporate investment, a territory’s knack for invention and innovation is a competitive necessity.
Read MoreS outh Australia plans to introduce itself to the world as an “Information Economy” success story, and it has just under a year in which to put the necessary pieces in place. Adelaide, the Australian state’s capital city, will be the site of the 2002 WITSA World Congress, a biennial conference of the World Information […]
Creative types don’t need tailor-made environments and amenities, just the freedom to build that ecosystem themselves.
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Contenders for Silicon Valley’s Top Ranking Abound in Global Startup Ecosystems Report 2022
How Hoosier Energy built a network of FDI projects in 2 states
by Alexis Elmore
As the conversation of blockchain solutions moves its way into the mainstream, we must continue to invest in understanding this powerful technology.
Nexterra's innovative bioenergy plant is one solution helping the University of British Columbia achieve its lofty sustainability goals.
Communities in Oklahoma rally behind diversifying education and building a better workforce.
Container ships are ‘cool running’ to ports of call in Jamaica.
The Government of Jamaica has unveiled ambitious plans that will build the Caribbean into a Global Logistics Hub for the Americas and position it as a regional trading mecca similar to Singapore, Dubai and Rotterdam.
by Alexis Elmore
No matter the industry, statewide workforce development programs grow with federal support.
Read MoreAlexis Elmore
Associate Editor of Site Selection Magazine
In Rural America, breaking out of your silo can be a literal endeavor.
Continue to: 2003’s Top Metros Chicago Dominance More Than Mythical
n December 22, 2004, Dell Inc. and North Carolina officials were gathering at a podium in Winston-Salem to announce the company’s investment of more than $100 million in a new assembly plant. State transportation workers at that moment were on the ground at Alliance Science and Technology Park staking rights-of-way for the project, in preparation […]
From Site Selection magazine, February 1994 New & Expanded Corporate Facilities 1991-93 Continue to next page | Site Selection Online ©1994 Conway Data, Inc. All rights reserved. SiteNet data is from many sources and is not warranted to be accurate or current.
P&G chooses a busy corner in West Virginia’s Eastern Panhandle for a next-gen manufacturing complex.
Investment Profile
by Adam Bruns
I never write a headline until after the article is complete, but this is the exception.
Connectivity Drives a New Strategic Alliance Cushman & Wakefield (C&W) has signed a unique strategic alliance with American Fiber Systems (AFS), Rochester, N.Y., a leading provider of dark-fiber-optic communications networks — fiber-optic cable without electronics equipment attached. The alliance calls for Cushman & Wakefield to negotiate arrangements that allow for the interconnection of AFS’s dark […]
Two sites and two more in the application process in Windsor-Essex are part of an elite group of Ontario’s Certified Sites.
Editor in Chief Mark Arend considers the new set of challenges now facing corporate real estate leaders as they recalibrate supply chains and consider reshoring operations.
E ast side, west side, biotech research parks are going up all around the town in Baltimore. Two major bio parks are in the works that figure to enhance Maryland’s already strong presence in the field. Maryland’s biotech industry has been ranked as the third most concentrated among U.S. states and includes more than 300 […]
Cover
Among the economic development themes to emerge across the 50 state legislatures and governor’s offices…
Read MoreFrom Site Selection magazine, May 2005 WORLD REPORTS Middle East Outlook Infrastructure, Research Parks, LNG Plants Among New Projects The incessant turmoil of the Middle East notwithstanding, the region is the scene of many planned major investments that bode well for its economic future. These include historic infrastructure projects, major research parks and a number […]
Food and beverage is one of Virginia’s top industry sectors, with more than 33,000 people working at PepsiCo, Tyson, Boar’s Head Provisions, Lipton Tea and well over 500 other companies.
At its best, corporate real estate is like Atlas, the mythical Greek god who bore the heavens: Top-flight real estate shoulders strategy. Appropriately, Lucent Technologies’ workplace strategy is dubbed “Project Atlas.” Led by Lucent’s real estate group, Project Atlas is a dramatic, five-year workplace transformation now under way for 24,000 key R&D employees located in […]
The fallout from VW's emissions scandal includes a $2-billion commitment to EV-charging infrastructure across the US.
Project Bulletin
Biotechnology company National Resilience, Inc. plans to add 440 new jobs at its West Chester, Ohio, site with a $229 million investment, announced in December 2023.
Read MoreIf the path being beaten to Texas’ front door is any indication, there’s a better way to do things in the Lone Star State. Giving businesses some certainty with which to risk investment capital and expand their enterprises has been central to the state’s economic success.
The third annual Ocean Health Index ranks 220 areas on criteria at the core of planetary life.
Government financial support for corporate facility investment and expansion continues to be a common practice in most parts of the world.
It may be early in the season for county fairs, but it’s not hard to find job fairs in Louisiana
JUNE/JULY 1998 Avoid the Sand Traps in Build-to-Suit Leases by Mark Arend Working effectively with developers in build-to-suit lease arrangements means being heavily involved in the building specifications early on and throughout the planning process, provided the facility’s complexity and intended use warrants such attention. After all, the developer is likely to sell the building, […]
Investment Profile
by Ron Starner
From help with wages to entrepreneur classes, San Bernardino County checks every box.
Read MoreRon Starner
Executive Vice President of Conway, Inc.
The federal Inflation Reduction Act is hitting home in the south-central U.S., where states known for big employers in the oil and gas industries are generating thousands of new jobs in clean energy...
Dear IAMC Members and Prospective Members, Just as we often ask ourselves on the job, I find myself asking this question at the end of my tenure as chair of IAMC: “Where did the time go?” But I know the answer. It went into a year and a half […]
With plenty of wind and fresh water, the Pacific Northwest holds the country’s greatest penetration of renewable energy, yet the region struggles to make those two resources work together. The challenge of integrating intermittent wind power is complicated by competing interests of power generators, salmon runs, and residents accustomed to cheap utility rates.
Nexterra's innovative bioenergy plant is one solution helping the University of British Columbia achieve its lofty sustainability goals.
by Alexis Elmore
Rural Washington is on the move thanks to state investment.
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Associate Editor of Site Selection Magazine
Market intelligence and analysis show companies making intelligent location choices across Greater Phoenix.
The first North American investment from Japan’s Nipro Medical Corporation helps fuel a cluster in eastern North Carolina.
Hamilton is CEO of Renmatix, a young and growing producer of cellulosic sugars for the global renewable chemical and fuels markets. Working with building owner Brandywine Realty Trust, architect Pier Derrickson of KlingStubbins and contractor Hollister Construction Services, the Renmatix team just saw the completion of the headquarters fit-out.
Texas leads the way in wind, branches out in biofuels and continues to diversify its dominant oil and gas portfolio.
What's In a Name?: As census designations for metro and micro areas change from year to year, some communities are left to deal with the aftermath.
Features
I’m halfway through my seventh decade, and I’ve spent my life in aerospace.
Read MoreFast Track Project Management WorkPlaceUSA (www.workplace-usa.com), a Dallas-based provider of project management and other real estate services, is using an Internet-based project management system from Citadon (www.citadon.com), San Francisco, to facilitate the simultaneous creation of 13 network information centers for WorldCom. The $900 million effort involves building 12 centers totaling 1.3 million sq. ft. (120,700 […]
A ppropriately, the University of Washington Husky Marching Band played “Tequila.” That 1958 oldie reflected the giddy buzz rippling through the gala toasting Boeing’s decision to bring its US$900-million 7E7 assembly plant to Everett, Wash. Both Boeing and Washington had similar reasons to celebrate. Each had mounted a bold gamble aiming […]
From Site Selection magazine, November 2003 NORTH AMERICAN REPORTS Milwaukee’s Waves of Change This summer, hundreds of thousands of Harley Davidson motorcycles roared into their birthplace to celebrate the Milwaukee company’s 100th anniversary. But Milwaukee is spending a lot less time looking back these days. To be sure, manufacturing’s presence in […]
Collaboration and regional thinking make for great slogans — but it’s tooth-and-nail competition when a company has to pick a final landing spot for a major investment.
Features
by Ron Starner
Site selectors keep Southern locations at the top of their short lists.
Read MoreRon Starner
Executive Vice President of Conway, Inc.
Tesla, Delorean Taking Texas There
The medical distribution giant’s global HQ will leave the Bay Area for the DFW suburb of Irving.
A $1.4-billion investment from ArcLight Capital Partners and Limetree Bay Terminals promises 700 new jobs and new revenue streams in the hard-hit U.S. territory.
Kent is the English county called the Garden of England. Plant a seed in Kent and it will grow and flourish — apples, pears, cherries, grapes, strawberries, blackcurrants, almost every vegetable imaginable, oats, barley, grain … Kent feeds millions of people on a daily basis.
In one corner of the Pee Dee region of South Carolina, where unemployment figures are among the highest in the nation, the heart of the community is both at stake and on display
Snapshot
Documenting community industrial development in the United States has been a core mission of Site Selection since we launched publication 70 years ago this month.
Read MoreJohn Carver, Jones Lang LaSalle's vice president for port, airport and global infrastructure, says there will be four East Coast ports ready to receive the mammoth post-panamax ships in 2014.
In addition to hosting one of the nation’s most diverse populations, New Jersey is home to 225 foreign company headquarters.
Australian firm Unilife Medical Solutions is nearing completion of its US$26-million global headquarters and manufacturing facility in York, Pa.
From Site Selection magazine, February 1990 New Facilities 1989 Continue to next page | Site Selection Online ©1990 Conway Data, Inc. All rights reserved. SiteNet data is from many sources and is not warranted to be accurate or current.
by Ron Starner
Once considered a longshot, the 2026 World Cup is coming to Seattle.
Read MoreRon Starner
Executive Vice President of Conway, Inc.
PROJECT FINANCE From Site Selection magazine, July 2008 A New School of Thought Atlanta-based TUFF finds opportunities for corporations and universities alike. by ADAM BRUNSadam.bruns bounce@conway.com W hat’s a school to do when an area’s demand for a university presence is growing at the same robust rate as the area’s companies, but funds for […]
Iowa is the bioprocessing capital of the world. This is a fact I recognized quickly when I assumed the role of Executive Director of the Iowa Biotechnology Association in 2014.
The co-owner of salon tool company Olivia Garden describes why Antioch and the Bay Area make sense for this global leader.
No state income tax is a big lure for a high-tech company sourcing talent in Rochester.
In late May, Intel announced the launch of the Intel Collaborative Research Institute for Sustainable Connected Cities in partnership with Imperial College London, University College London and the emerging Tech City cluster of East London.
by Lindsay Lopp
Explore how each region makes its mark.
Read MoreLindsay Lopp
Associate Editor of Site Selection Magazine
Here are some highlights from the 10 leaders in their field, presented in alphabetical order:
Measured by its ability to weather acute and chronic stresses, Rochester, N.Y. was ranked 61st out of 361 U.S. metros last year by the Resilience Capacity Index (RCI), developed by Kathryn A. Foster, director of the Regional Institute, a research and public policy center of the University at Buffalo.
No matter where you live in the United States, you've seen a version of the headline, "City Hall Gives Way in Stadium Deal." In El Paso, Texas, they take those words literally.
To understand where the United States Public-Private Partnership (P3) market is going, you have to review where it came from.
s if to underscore its claim to the 2004 Governor’s Cup, Texas ended the calendar year with a December new-jobs announcement that dwarfs the number of jobs associated with any of the more than 660 qualifying projects that won the state the award. Countrywide Financial will add 7,500 employees to its payroll in the state, […]
Features
by Mark Arend
The rankings on these pages are high-level measures of states’ workforce development climates.
Read MoreMark Arend
Editor Emeritus of Site Selection Magazine
Talk to enough corporate real estate decision-makers and, no matter what type of project is at hand, one issue consistently bubbles to the surface: parking.
In 2017, the Lone Star State blew away all comers to further cement its reputation as the No. 1 exporter in the US.
Site Selection is proud to publish our fifth annual State of the States report in this, our 60th anniversary issue.
At a time when workforce housing is sorely needed, last month the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) awarded $3.17 billion in Public Housing Repair funding to 2,756 public housing authorities (PHAs) in all 50 states, D.C. and several U.S. territories to make capital investments to their public housing stock.
By claiming first place in Site Selection’s annual ranking of state competitiveness, Virginia proved that second place merely means there’s room for improvement. The Commonwealth lost no ground and gained what little there was to gain from its runner-up finish in 2010 with a best-in-class finish for economic development success in 2011.
Project Bulletin
In December 2023, an hour northwest of Richmond, Virginia, Culpeper County officials approved plans for Cielo Digital Infrastructure to construct a $5.4 billion data center.
Read MoreFood processing has long been an industrial staple in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania
Why this region is ahead of the pack in attracting
advanced industry projects.
We explore the $45 billion Lusail City, new incentives for AI and tech in Saudi Arabia, and the massive Tasreef Project in Dubai.
The state and provincial governments of the Pacific Northwest already are known for their strong environmental positions when it comes to development and permitting.
s Congress mulls giving its nod to the 2005 round of BRAC (Base Realignment & Closing), which targets 33 major U.S. military bases for closure and 29 others for realignment, many communities affected by previous BRAC rounds are doing quite well in their redevelopment efforts. BRAC communities have created more than 100,000 jobs so far, […]
Features
A close look at two dozen ‘out-of-the-box’ cities around the globe for future software and support centers.
Read Mores Congress mulls giving its nod to the 2005 round of BRAC (Base Realignment & Closing), which targets 33 major U.S. military bases for closure and 29 others for realignment, many communities affected by previous BRAC rounds are doing quite well in their redevelopment efforts. BRAC communities have created more than 100,000 jobs so far, […]
Central America is increasingly valuable as a nearshoring option for U.S. multinational companies looking to site back office and contact center operations to serve North American clients.
Site Selection presents the Best Practices Award winners selected by the International Development Research Council Pssssst! Wanna fix some problems in your company?s real estate program? Once upon a time, you might have told someone from finance or operations to come up with a plan, or hired an outside consultant, and then imposed a solution […]
Sites along this Interstate are proving to be the right ones for data centers, especially in northern Indiana.
Cart Before the Horse? If a proposed 25% tariff were to go into effect, the cost of 12 STS cranes already ordered from Chinese companies by the Port of Virginia (pictured) would balloon from $161.52 million to nearly $202 million, says the AAPA. Photo courtesy of […]
Cover
by Adam Bruns
Before we look back, let’s look forward:
Read MoreAdam Bruns
Editor in Chief of Site Selection Magazine
In the drive to optimize cubage, automation and e-commerce drive the stacks and the ceilings ever higher.
THE 2006 COMPETITIVENESS AWARD From Site Selection magazine, May 2007 Take Two The Alabama Development Office claims its second Competitiveness Award. by MARK AREND mark.arend bounce@conway.com E ven as the Alabama Development Office (ADO) was battling its counterpart in Louisiana for the giant ThyssenKrupp steel plant project this spring, the agency paused in April to […]
An update on power company–affiliated economic development around the US shows the diverse economic meanings of the word 'utility.'
Why are so many companies picking Kentucky locations for their largest-ever capital investment projects?
Online Insider
by Ron Starner
The new president of Liberty University brings lessons from the Air Force to ground level.
Read MoreRon Starner
Executive Vice President of Conway, Inc.
In April the U.S. Army announced plans to start development of a solar array that will provide about 25 percent of the annual installation electricity requirement of Fort Huachuca, Ariz., in the state’s southeastern corner just a stone’s throw from the Mexican border.
The U.S. wind industry supply chain anxiously awaits political resolution to the production tax credit issue. Acciona, a Spanish energy specialist, opened its first North American facility in the heart of U.S. wind country in West Branch, Iowa, in December 2007 with the plan of providing turbines to wind farms in North America, primarily those operated by Acciona Energy.
On the following pages we join corporate end users and site selection consultants around the world in celebrating those doing it best.
California sites mainly make today’s site-location short lists if the companies looking for space simply must be in California.
W Potlatch Corp.’s new distribution center at CenterPoint Intermodal Center on the former Joliet (Ill.) Arsenal property will soon be joined by the company’s tissue converting plant next door. hen Potlatch Corp., a Spokane, Wash.-based manufacturer of wood and paper products, began looking for a site for a new distribution center to serve its expanded […]
Special Advertising Sections
by Adam Bruns
Projects across the 12,000 miles of the U.S. inland waterway system spotlight the impact of the U.S. Marine Highway Program.
Read MoreAdam Bruns
Editor in Chief of Site Selection Magazine
Germany-based automotive parts manufacturer Continental AG has announced plans to locate its 22nd facility in Mexico.
MAY 2006 Removing Real Estate from the Books Can Add to the Bottom Line (cover) Capital Lease Funding Expansion at Lexington Corporate Properties Trust Net Lease Capital Advisors Branches Out U.S. Realty Advisors’ Flexibility Big Increases at Capital Lease Funding Request Information SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTIONSALE/LEASEBACK TRANSACTIONS Removing Real Estate from the Books Can Add to […]
A half-dozen ways that Oregon’s boundless, natural gifts inspire body and spirit.
Global food and beverage companies continue to make major investments in the Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News metro area.
A new transatlantic agreement would be a giant step forward for two longtime trading partners.