Localized On Premises Patent Solutions
Solve Intelligence
This is less a translation feature than a distribution unlock. Solve already sells remotely across six continents, but the next wave of demand sits in patent markets where local language drafting, jurisdiction specific style rules, and data residency matter as much as raw model quality. In patent work, buyers need outputs that match local filing practice and often cannot send invention disclosures, prosecution history, or litigation materials to a shared foreign cloud.
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Patent volume is moving toward the regions that reward localization. WIPO says global patent filings hit 3.7M in 2024, with growth driven by China, India, Korea, and Japan. That means more of the global workflow sits in languages and filing norms that an English first product will only partially cover.
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On premises deployment is often a trust product, not just an infrastructure option. Solve handles invention disclosures, office actions, technical drawings, and claim charts inside a drafting workflow. For corporate R&D groups and regulated enterprises, keeping that material inside their own environment can be the difference between a pilot and a broad rollout.
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Incumbents and horizontal AI players are already moving this way. Clarivate bought Rowan Patents to add drafting into its IP stack, LexisNexis partnered with Harvey to combine proprietary legal content with AI workflows, and Mistral has grown by selling private deployments for buyers that want sovereign control. The pattern is clear, AI adoption expands fastest when it fits local data and compliance requirements.
The next step is for patent AI to split into two layers. Shared cloud tools will win standard drafting in English speaking markets, while localized and private deployments will win higher sensitivity work in Europe and Asia. If Solve builds strong non English drafting and credible on premises delivery, geographic expansion can become a product advantage, not just a sales hiring plan.