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Begin with your goal, deadline, market, and current document status.
First understand the path. Then choose the right next step. Applitent helps inventors, founders, and professionals organize documentation for patent, PCT/WIPO, national phase, startup visa, talent visa, business plan, personal branding, and patent sale workflows.
Last updated: June 2026
Guided decision
Use the compass, process map, and preparation checklist to narrow your path before you send a message or choose a paid service.
Guided process
Begin with your goal, deadline, market, and current document status.
Use the compass to connect your need to the most relevant FAQ areas.
Gather a short organized summary before deeper review.
Use dashboard-based file collection when a service workflow begins.
Keep questions and required materials organized in one process.
Move forward only after the scope and direction are clearer.
Service Compass
Pick the closest goal to highlight a recommended reading path. All answers remain available even without JavaScript.
Clear boundaries
Preparation checklist
You do not need a perfect file. A short, organized summary is enough for the first step.
Need a human review after reading? Use the free consultation form only when your goal, market, deadline, and current document status are ready at a high level.
Open free consultationGeneral questions
Start here if you are learning what Applitent does, who it supports, and how to choose a service path.
Best if: You are new to Applitent and want the safe overview first.
Applitent helps inventors, founders, professionals, and companies organize the documentation and preparation work needed for patent, PCT/WIPO, national phase, startup visa, talent visa, business plan, personal branding, and patent sale workflows. The focus is on making information clearer, preparing structured files, and helping users understand the next step before they commit to a paid service. Applitent does not promise official outcomes. Results depend on the case, submitted information, official authorities, partner professionals, and review processes.
Applitent can be used by individual inventors, startup founders, researchers, professionals, companies, and legal entities that need organized documentation for innovation, patent, visa-support, business, or profile-building processes. The site supports both Natural Person and Legal Person account types. If you are not sure whether your case fits, the best first step is to use the free consultation page and briefly explain your situation.
Applitent is not presented as a law firm and should not be treated as a substitute for legal advice. Applitent focuses on documentation support, preparation workflows, case organization, and coordination where professional review may be needed. Some patent, visa, or legal steps may require licensed professionals, official authorities, or country-specific representation. Applitent can help prepare and organize materials, but legal decisions and official outcomes are outside Applitent’s control.
No. Applitent does not guarantee patent grants, visa approvals, investor decisions, buyer interest, licensing deals, or official acceptance by any authority. The goal is to improve preparation quality, reduce confusion, and organize the case in a clearer way. Official results depend on the facts of the case, legal and technical requirements, market interest, country rules, authorities, and third-party review.
Applitent is built for international applicants and cross-border documentation workflows. Some services, such as PCT/WIPO and national phase support, are naturally country-sensitive because deadlines, fees, translations, and professional requirements can vary by jurisdiction. If your case involves a specific country or region, mention it during the free consultation so Applitent can guide you toward the right preparation path.
If your invention is not clearly documented yet, start by reviewing Patent Description. If you are thinking about international patent planning, review PCT/WIPO support. If you already know the target countries, review National Patent Phase. If your goal is commercialization or transfer, review Patent Sell. If your case involves startup, talent, business, or profile documentation, check Startup Visa, Talent Visa, Business Plan, and Personal Branding. If you are still unsure, request a free consultation.
Free consultation
Use these answers before sending your first high-level message to Applitent.
Best if: You want a high-level direction before choosing a paid service.
Yes. The initial consultation request is free. It is designed to help Applitent understand your case at a high level and suggest a practical next step. Submitting the form does not automatically create a paid order. A paid service should only begin after the scope, required documents, and pricing are clear.
After you submit the form, Applitent receives your request and reviews the summary you provided. You should also receive a confirmation email if the submitted email address is valid. The next step is usually a reply or follow-up asking for more context, recommending a service path, or clarifying whether sensitive details should be moved into a private workflow.
Response time can depend on workload, the complexity of the request, and the amount of information submitted. A clear message with your goal, timeline, country or market, and current document status usually helps the team respond faster. If your case is urgent, mention the deadline clearly in the free consultation form.
Write a short practical summary. Explain what you want to do, what stage you are in, what documents you already have, and what deadline or country matters most. Avoid sending a long unorganized story. A useful message might say: “I have an invention summary and sketches, but no patent filing yet. I want to know whether I should start with a patent description or PCT planning.”
No, not in full detail. The first message should usually stay high-level. You can explain the problem, general field, current stage, and what kind of help you need without revealing the most sensitive technical details. If deeper review is needed, Applitent can guide you toward a safer private process or an NDA discussion before detailed materials are shared.
Yes. If your case involves sensitive invention details, unpublished technical information, commercial strategy, or confidential company material, you can request an NDA or confidentiality step before sharing deeper files. Mention this in the free consultation form so Applitent knows that your first message should remain high-level.
No. Submitting the free consultation form does not create a paid order. It starts a review and communication process. A paid order should only be created after the relevant service, expected scope, required files, and pricing are clear.
Patent documentation
Questions about invention descriptions, drawings, filings, and public disclosure history.
Best if: You have an invention but the explanation is not ready yet.
A patent description is a structured explanation of an invention. It usually describes the technical field, the problem, the solution, important parts or steps, drawings or examples, and how the invention works. A strong patent description helps professionals understand the invention more clearly and can support later patent-related decisions. Applitent’s Patent Description service focuses on organizing this material, not guaranteeing a patent grant.
Prepare a plain summary of the invention, drawings or sketches if available, inventor names, current ownership facts, any public disclosure history, target markets or countries, and any earlier filings or documents. You do not need everything to be perfect, but the more organized your starting material is, the easier it is to build a clear invention file.
Yes. Applitent can help organize invention details, explanations, file structure, and the information needed to make drawings or technical descriptions easier to review. If professional drawings or specialized technical/legal review are required, that may need separate coordination. The goal is to make your invention materials clearer and more usable before the next step.
Patent description support prepares and organizes the invention information. Filing a patent is a formal legal or official process that may require specific forms, fees, claims, drawings, official rules, and professional representation depending on the country. Applitent can help prepare the documentation side, but filing decisions and official patent outcomes depend on the relevant authority and professional review.
Yes, Applitent may still help organize next steps if you already filed a provisional application, national filing, PCT application, or another patent-related document. You should provide the filing date, application number if available, country or office, current status, and any deadlines. This information helps determine whether the next issue is description improvement, PCT planning, national phase preparation, or another path.
Public disclosure can affect patent options, especially in countries with strict novelty rules. If your invention has already been shown, sold, published, presented, or posted online, tell Applitent early. The team can help organize the timeline and materials, but patentability and legal consequences require professional review and depend on the jurisdiction, timing, and details of the disclosure.
PCT/WIPO and national phase
International patent route questions for applicants planning PCT/WIPO or national phase steps.
Best if: You are thinking beyond one country or already have filing deadlines.
PCT/WIPO support helps organize the documents and information needed to review an international patent route under the Patent Cooperation Treaty. This may include applicant details, inventor details, priority information, technical description, drawings, target countries, and timing. The PCT route can help structure an international patent pathway, but it does not automatically create a granted global patent.
No. A PCT application is not the same as an international granted patent. It is an international filing route that can help applicants delay and organize later national or regional decisions. Patents are still granted or refused by national or regional offices. This is why PCT/WIPO planning should be connected to commercial priorities, deadlines, and later country-specific decisions.
National phase patent support helps prepare for country-specific or regional patent steps after an international or earlier filing path. It may involve target-country selection, document organization, translations, local requirements, fee planning, and professional coordination. The details can vary significantly by jurisdiction, so early preparation helps reduce confusion.
You should think about national phase preparation before deadlines become urgent. If you already know which countries or regions matter commercially, start organizing the information early: filing history, priority dates, invention documents, claims or descriptions, drawings, applicant information, and budget expectations. Waiting until the last moment can make translation, coordination, and decision-making harder.
Useful information includes the invention description, drawings, applicant and inventor data, earlier filing dates, priority claims, current application status, target countries, business goals, and known deadlines. If you are unsure what applies to your case, start with a free consultation and provide a high-level summary first.
Patent sale / Patent Sell
Preparation questions for transfer, licensing, buyer review, and commercialization paths.
Best if: You want to prepare a patent or invention for buyer, partner, or license review.
Patent sale support helps organize a patent, patent application, or invention opportunity for a potential sale, transfer, licensing discussion, or buyer review. It may include ownership facts, filing status, market explanation, invention summary, buyer category, and commercial value narrative. Applitent does not guarantee a buyer or deal; the service focuses on preparation and structured presentation.
Prepare ownership information, filing status, invention summary, drawings or product visuals, commercial use cases, target industries, possible buyer types, and any evidence of market need. A buyer usually needs more than an idea. They need to understand what exists, who owns it, what problem it solves, and why it may have value.
Not always, but having a filed patent or patent application can make the discussion clearer because there is a more defined asset to review. If nothing has been filed, the conversation may first need to focus on documenting the invention, understanding disclosure risk, and deciding whether filing should come before commercialization outreach.
No. Applitent cannot guarantee buyer interest, sale, licensing, valuation, or transfer result. Patent sale outcomes depend on the invention, ownership clarity, market demand, buyer interest, technical value, negotiation, and many external factors. Applitent’s role is to help organize and present the opportunity more clearly.
Filing is about seeking protection for an invention. Selling usually means transferring ownership or rights. Licensing usually means allowing another party to use rights under agreed terms while ownership may remain with the original owner. These are different paths and require different preparation. If you are unsure which path fits, use the free consultation page before choosing a service.
Startup visa, talent visa, and business plan
Document organization answers for founders, professionals, profiles, and business plans.
Best if: Your case depends on startup, talent, profile, or business documentation.
Applitent can help organize startup-related materials such as founder background, business concept, product description, market logic, traction evidence, team information, milestones, and supporting documents. Requirements vary by country and program, so Applitent focuses on preparation and document structure, not approval guarantees.
Talent visa support helps professionals organize evidence of achievements, experience, recognition, portfolio strength, field relevance, and supporting documents. This may include summaries, document lists, profile organization, and preparation for review. Applitent does not guarantee visa approval, because decisions depend on official criteria and the reviewing authority.
A strong business plan usually explains the product or service, problem, market, customer, business model, competition, team, operations, milestones, risks, and financial assumptions. The best business plans are not just attractive documents; they make the logic of the business easier to understand. Applitent’s Business Plan support focuses on structure, clarity, and presentation.
Yes. Applitent can help organize supporting evidence, achievement records, market documents, founder information, company documents, and profile materials. This is useful for startup visa, talent visa, business plan, and personal branding workflows. The goal is to make the material easier to review and less scattered.
No. Applitent does not guarantee startup visa, talent visa, or any immigration-related approval. Visa outcomes depend on official rules, eligibility, evidence quality, reviewing authorities, deadlines, and country-specific requirements. Applitent can help with preparation and organization, but final decisions are outside Applitent’s control.
Yes. Applitent can help organize the story, structure, and supporting materials behind a pitch deck or founder profile. This may connect naturally with Business Plan, Startup Visa, Talent Visa, or Personal Branding support. If design-only work or investor-specific strategy is required, the exact scope should be clarified before a paid order is created.
Orders, dashboard, files, and process
How public service requests move into structured private workflows and document uploads.
Best if: You want to understand private file collection, order steps, and communication.
After you choose a service, you can begin the service workflow through the website. The process usually asks for applicant details, service-specific information, terms acceptance, uploads, and final review before submission. The goal is to collect structured information instead of scattered messages.
Yes. Users can access a private dashboard to manage requests, continue drafts, review submitted service requests, upload documents, and follow communication where available. The dashboard is separate from the public site and is designed to keep service workflows more organized.
Files are uploaded through the relevant service workflow or dashboard area. The exact required files depend on the service. For example, patent-related services may need invention descriptions, drawings, filing information, or ownership details, while business or visa-related services may need profile, company, market, or evidence documents.
Some information may be editable before final submission, and communication may continue through the dashboard or support process after submission. If you notice an important mistake after submitting, contact Applitent as soon as possible so the team can review what can be corrected or clarified.
Applitent may communicate through dashboard notifications, ticket/support replies, status updates, and email notifications depending on the situation. The goal is to keep the process traceable and reduce confusion compared with scattered chat or email threads.
Uploaded files are intended for private workflow use, not public display. They should be handled as part of the service process. Users should still avoid uploading unnecessary sensitive material until the correct service path and confidentiality expectations are clear. For privacy details, review the Privacy Notice and Legal Hub.
Pricing and payment
How to think about pricing, paid orders, country-sensitive scopes, and custom quotes.
Best if: You need to understand when paid work starts and how scope affects price.
Some services may have fixed starting prices, while others may depend on complexity, country, document volume, professional requirements, or scope. For example, national phase or country-specific patent work can vary depending on jurisdiction and case details. If pricing is unclear, request a free consultation or custom quote first.
Pricing can depend on service type, number of documents, technical complexity, target countries, translation needs, local professional requirements, and deadlines. A simple preparation task is different from a complex international or multi-country workflow. Applitent should clarify the scope before a paid order is created.
No. The free consultation request does not require payment. It is meant to help clarify your case and next step. Payment should only be part of a paid service after the relevant scope and price are clear.
A paid order should be created when the user intentionally chooses a service and moves forward with the required workflow. Submitting a free consultation form alone does not create a paid order. If a custom quote is needed, the scope should be reviewed before payment.
Yes. If your case is unusual, country-specific, urgent, document-heavy, or outside a standard service package, you can request a custom quote. Use the free consultation form and clearly explain what you need, your deadline, and what documents already exist.
Privacy and legal
Public policy, privacy, cookies, and correction/removal questions for users.
Best if: You want to review privacy, cookies, legal boundaries, and user rights.
Applitent collects and uses personal information for account, consultation, service workflow, communication, and document-preparation purposes. The exact handling is explained in the Privacy Notice and Legal Hub. Users should review those pages before submitting sensitive information.
You can read Applitent’s legal information in the Legal Hub. It includes privacy, terms, cookie, and related public policy sections. The footer should also link to legal and privacy pages so users can review them before creating an account or submitting a request.
The site includes cookie consent structure for essential, preference, analytics, and marketing categories. Analytics or marketing tracking should only be activated when the relevant tools are intentionally configured. No Google Ads, Google Analytics, GTM, or tracking pixel should be added as part of this FAQ task.
Users may request correction or removal of personal information where applicable and subject to legal, operational, and record-keeping requirements. For details, review the Privacy Notice and contact Applitent through the available public or account communication channels.
Next step
If your case involves patents, PCT/WIPO, national phase, startup visa, talent visa, business plan, personal branding, or patent sale support, start with a short consultation request after reviewing the relevant path.
Request free consultation →