A three-pillar moat strategy, the EMprint™ commissioning-fingerprint patent family, shielding-as-a-service with a billable-hours engine, and first-mover EAD certification, plus a draft Service Level Agreement.
| Rev | Date | Description | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.2 | 2026-07-06 | Family navigation extended to documents 005-007; register alignment | Current |
| 1.1 | 2026-07-06 | Document-family navigation added; typography pass (dash removal); cross-references updated; stable filename convention | Superseded by 1.2 |
| 1.0 | 2026-07-06 | First issue, IP strategy, service tiers & rate card, draft SLA, EAD/standards plan, 36-month timeline, financial sketch | Superseded by 1.1 |
| - | 2026-07-05 | Origin: §15 / closing suggestions of AVE-EMV-RD-001 Rev 1.0 | Reference |
Panels can be copied within a product cycle. What cannot be copied quickly is a legally protected verification method, a book of multi-year service contracts built on that method, and a certification framework written in our vocabulary. The three pillars are deliberately interlocking: each one makes the other two harder to attack.
Patent the commissioning-fingerprint method (baseline joint-impedance map → SE correlation → lifetime re-survey), keep the correlation dataset as a trade secret, and trademark the service brand.
Sell verified shielding performance over time, tiered assurance contracts with included engineering allowances, a billable-hours engine for everything beyond, and consumable gasket cartridges.
Co-author the first European Assessment Document for a "shielded weatherable envelope kit", embedding IEEE 299-derived acceptance and EMprint verification as the assessment method.
The insight from RD-001 stands: the most defensible asset is not a material but a method of proving installed performance and its retention over decades. The IP strategy therefore splits deliberately into what we publish (patents), what we never publish (trade secrets), and what we brand (trademarks).
| Claim family | Draft scope | Defensibility view |
|---|---|---|
| F1 · Method (core) | A method of verifying the electromagnetic shielding continuity of a building envelope: measuring DC resistance and/or AC transfer impedance at a defined set of inter-panel joints via integrated test lands; generating a geo-referenced baseline "fingerprint" at commissioning; correlating fingerprint values to installed shielding effectiveness via a calibration model; re-measuring over the service life and triggering maintenance on defined deviation thresholds. | Strongest, file first |
| F2 · System / apparatus | Panel joint comprising a replaceable conductive gasket cartridge with integrated, accessible test lands; the handheld/portable measurement head keyed to those lands; the bonded penetration-bay plate with test architecture. | Strong, ties method to hardware |
| F3 · Software / CRM | Computer-implemented method: digital-twin storage of fingerprints, degradation-trend prediction, joint-level fault localisation from distributed impedance data (X-SENSE), automated compliance reporting against contracted SE minima. | Jurisdiction-dependent (software patentability varies) |
| F4 · Continuations | Held back for filing as competitors emerge: drone/robotic survey heads, acoustic-assisted joint inspection, repair-verification variants. | Optionality |
The correlation database, thousands of measured (joint impedance ↔ installed SE ↔ age ↔ environment) data points accumulated through the §07 test programme and every commissioned site, is deliberately kept out of the patents beyond the minimum needed for enablement. Patents expire in 20 years; the dataset compounds forever, and every SLA we sign feeds it. This creates a genuine tension (enablement vs. secrecy) that must be resolved by patent counsel before drafting, and it requires contract clauses (see SLA clause 11) establishing that customers own their site data while AVE owns the method, the models and anonymised aggregate learning.
| Step | Action | Timing / est. cost |
|---|---|---|
| FTO search | Freedom-to-operate and prior-art search: shielded-room certification practice, EMC gasket transfer-impedance testing (IEC 62153 family), MIL-DTL-83528 QA regimes, structural-health-monitoring patents (nearest adjacent art). | Month 0-2 · €15-30k |
| Priority filing | F1+F2 combined priority application. Hard rule: filed before any third-party pilot, demo or paper, one public disclosure destroys novelty in most jurisdictions. | Month 2-4 · €10-20k |
| PCT | International application preserving options. | Month 12-14 · €8-15k |
| National phase | EP, US, plus data-centre construction markets: UK, SG, JP, AU (IE covered via EP). | Month 30 · €80-180k over 3-4 yrs |
| Trademarks | EMprint™ (method/service), EMvelope™ (system), EUIPO + USPTO + WIPO Madrid. | Month 0-6 · €8-15k |
| Hygiene | Invention-disclosure log; NDA-before-pilot policy; lab notebooks with dating; employee/contractor IP assignment audit. | Continuous |
The unit of sale shifts from "m² of panel" to "verified dB, maintained over a contract term". Three tiers, each anchored to the EMprint baseline created at commissioning, each with a defined engineering allowance so billable hours have a clean trigger.
Why customers sign: data-centre operators already live in SLA culture; an insurer, landlord or planning authority that has been promised a shielded, low-emission envelope will ask who evidences it annually, and the answer becomes a line item, not an argument. Why finance likes it: at portfolio scale the service book converts one-off construction margin into contracted, high-margin recurring revenue with 5-10 year terms and renewal gravity (the baseline is ours).
Billable hours are the pressure-relief valve of the model: tiers include a defined allowance; everything beyond flows through change control at the rate card. This keeps tier pricing predictable for the customer and protects our engineers from unpriced scope creep. All figures are illustrative placeholders for commercial review, stated in EUR, exclusive of VAT, travel and subsistence.
| Role | Typical work | Hourly | Day rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Principal EMC engineer | Acceptance testing, threat-model consulting, SLA compliance sign-off, expert reports | €195 | €1,480 |
| Shield commissioning engineer | EMprint baselining, re-surveys, repair verification | €140 | €1,050 |
| Certified installation supervisor | Site QA during construction/repair, torque-and-test audits | €110 | €820 |
| Monitoring & data engineer | X-SENSE configuration, digital-twin analytics, dashboard builds | €125 | €940 |
| Boundary EMF / ecology surveyor | ICNIRP-referenced boundary surveys, lighting & habitat monitoring | €115 | €860 |
| Training delivery (per cohort-day) | Installer certification courses (see §10) | - | €2,400 |
| Mechanism | Rule |
|---|---|
| Emergency mobilisation | P1 call-outs beyond tier allowance: 1.5× rates, minimum 2 days, plus fixed mobilisation fee €1,800/event. |
| Out-of-hours / live-hall work | 1.5× (nights/weekends), 2.0× (customer-mandated <24 h notice). |
| Allowance treatment | Tier allowances expire annually (no rollover); unused days convertible at 50% value into training credits, feeds the certified-installer pipeline. |
| Annual indexation | Rates and tier fees indexed to CPI + 1%, floor 2%, stated in the SLA. |
| Consumables | Gasket cartridges, caps and test-land kits sold at list; genuine-parts requirement tied to warranty validity (see competition-law caution, §09). |
| Change control | Any work outside the Service Description requires a signed Change Order quoting rate-card estimates before commencement, no verbal instructions billed. |
A working skeleton in plain contractual English, engineered so every promise maps to a §RD-001 physical capability and every exclusion maps to a known failure mode. For legal drafting, not signature.
| Service level | Target | Measured by |
|---|---|---|
| Commissioning fingerprint & certificate delivery | 10 business days after acceptance test | Report timestamp |
| Annual re-certification survey window | ±30 days of anniversary | Survey date |
| Survey report delivery | 15 business days after survey | Report timestamp |
| P1 Deviation, remote diagnosis | 1 business day | Ticket log |
| P1 Deviation, engineer on site | 5 business days | Attendance record |
| P2 Deviation, on site | 20 business days | Attendance record |
| Repair supervision attendance (notified ≥10 days ahead) | Agreed date, 95% adherence | Attendance record |
| Gasket-cartridge order fulfilment | 10 business days ex-works | Despatch record |
| Boundary EMF annual report | By anniversary date | Report timestamp |
Tier 3 (Continuum) variant adds: anomaly alert issued ≤4 h from detection (monitored 24/7), monitoring-system availability ≥99.0% measured monthly, quarterly dashboard by the 10th business day. Tier 1 (Baseline) strips clauses 2's annual items to the year 2/5/10 schedule.
No harmonised product standard exists for a weatherable shielded building envelope. That gap is the opportunity: the manufacturer who triggers the first European Assessment Document gets to co-write the assessment methods every later entrant must be measured against.
Under the EU Construction Products framework, a manufacturer requests a European Technical Assessment (ETA) from a Technical Assessment Body, NSAI Agrément in Ireland is the natural first port of call given our base, with a Continental TAB engaged in parallel for weight. Because no EAD covers "electromagnetic-shielding weatherable envelope kits", the TAB develops one through EOTA, in consultation with us as the requesting manufacturer. Our IEEE 299-derived installed-acceptance protocol and the EMprint verification regime are proposed as the assessment and factory-production-control methods. Realistic timeline: 18-36 months to a cited EAD and first ETA; budget €150-350k including testing evidence (much of which the RD-001 §11 programme produces anyway).
| Forum | Move | Payoff |
|---|---|---|
| EOTA / TAB (NSAI + one EU TAB) | ETA request triggering EAD development; embed acceptance protocol + EMprint FPC method. | Core moat |
| CENELEC / EN 50600 community | Propose an EM-resilience informative annex or technical report for the data-centre facilities standard series, contributing our phenomena-separation table as the vocabulary. | Specification pull-through |
| IEEE EMC Society | Present installed-SE-vs-coupon findings from the M6-M18 programme; visible technical authorship without disclosing the correlation dataset. | Credibility (mind patent timing) |
| Uptime / industry bodies | White paper + tier-style checklist for "EM hygiene" in data-centre design; train the market to ask questions only we can currently answer. | Demand creation |
| Insurers | Engage two specialty insurers early: continuous evidence of shield integrity as an underwriting input; explore premium recognition for Tier 2/3 sites. | Unproven, pilot dependent |
Worked example, single reference project, a 12,000 m² shielded envelope, façade contract value €6.0 M. All figures are placeholders for finance-team modelling; margins assume the rate card of §04 and exclude R&D amortisation.
| Revenue line | Year-1 | Years 2-5 (p.a.) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 2 "Assure" fee (2.0% of contract value) | €120,000 | €120,000+CPI | Contracted, quarterly in advance |
| Billable hours beyond allowance (est. 12 days blended €1,000) | €12,000 | €12-25,000 | Grows with site churn/works |
| Gasket cartridges & consumables | €8,000 | €8-15,000 | Tracks repair volume |
| Installer training (2 cohorts) | €9,600 | €4,800 | Also builds the ecosystem |
| Service revenue per site | ≈ €150k | ≈ €145-170k | ≈ 2.5% of capex, annually, at 45-60% gross margin (estimate) |
At a modest book of 20 assured sites, the service line reaches roughly €3 M p.a. of recurring revenue with construction-independent margin, and, strategically more important, 20 sites feeding the correlation dataset that no later entrant can buy. Sensitivity to test: tier price acceptance (the 2% assumption is untested), engineer utilisation, and travel drag on Irish-based teams serving Continental sites.
| Risk | Mitigation / required review | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Competition law, tying & genuine-parts clauses | Warranty conditioned on genuine gaskets and certified installers can raise tying/aftermarket-foreclosure issues (EU Art. 101/102 exposure at scale). Draft as objective-quality-justification; offer certification path for third-party installers. Competition counsel review mandatory before any contract issues. | High |
| Patent not granted / narrowed | Strategy degrades gracefully to trade secret + trademark + head start; do not build the business case on granted claims. FTO before filing. | High |
| Premature disclosure destroys novelty | IP-clearance gate on all papers, pilots, EAD workshops; NDA-before-pilot policy. | High |
| SLA promises outrun M18 evidence | Guaranteed Minima locked to measured pilot results; no SLA signature before RD-001 §11 M18 gate passes. | High |
| Liability drift toward downtime exposure | Data-centre downtime claims dwarf fee income; clause 12 caps + insurance placement (PI + product) reviewed by broker before first signature. | High |
| EAD stalls or is genericised | Twin-TAB engagement; keep EN 50600 track as independent vocabulary play; value case survives on Pillars 1-2 alone. | Medium |
| Service delivery capacity | Rate card useless without engineers; academy (§10) and utilisation model needed by M12. | Medium |
| Greenwash / overclaim in sales | Clause 3 exclusions mirrored in all collateral; marketing audit against RD-001 §02 quarterly. | Medium |
| Idea | Sketch |
|---|---|
| Insurance-linked assurance | Co-develop with a specialty insurer a premium credit or extended-warranty product for Tier 2/3 sites, turning the SLA into a customer cost-offset rather than a cost. The continuous evidence trail is exactly what underwriters lack today. |
| Certified-installer academy as a profit line | License the QA regime to façade contractors (training + annual certification fee + audit). Scales delivery capacity without headcount and makes the ecosystem itself the switching cost. |
| Fingerprint-in-BIM / building passport | Publish EMprint baselines as an IFC/COBie extension so the shield's health lives in the owner's digital twin, first mover on a data schema is another soft standard to author. |
| "Or-equivalent" defence kit | A specifier-facing technical note defining what "equivalent" verification must demonstrate (uncertainty budgets, test-land access, dataset depth), legitimate technical education that raises the bar precisely where rivals are weakest. |
| Securitisable service book | Once >20 long-term SLAs exist, the contracted cash flows resemble infrastructure revenue, financeable or securitisable to fund the next R&D wave. |
| Regulator-ready emissions registry | Aggregate (anonymised) boundary-EMF results into an annual public transparency report, cheap, honest ESG substance that competitors without measurement programmes cannot imitate. |