Reflections on a path to the Presidency

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Reflections on a path to the Presidency

lewis-aipla.jpg

Over the past several weeks, I have been asked innumerable times how I rose through the ranks of AIPLA to become the organization’s President

aiplalogospelled.jpg



lewisjeff200.jpg

pbwt-stack-2line-280.jpg

The simple answer is that AIPLA is a meritocracy; it appreciates and promotes its volunteers.

Many years ago – although it seems like just yesterday – I was a junior associate attending an AIPLA Annual Meeting, where Ken Krosin, Chair of the AIPLA Patent Litigation Committee, started talking about publishing a summary of Federal Circuit decisions. He had lists sorted by subject matter, so I picked the shortest one – double patenting – and got involved by summarizing those cases. I guess I did a decent job because when the idea to follow a new case called Markman was raised, the next Chair of the Patent Litigation Committee, Mark Abate, said, “Jeff, why don’t you form a sub-committee.” Later, when I suggested that the subcommittee ought to put together a White Paper to help judges deal with Markman, people jumped on board and it was eventually published in the AIPLA Quarterly Journal.

The point is that AIPLA recognizes and values ideas, and welcomes volunteers. Those initial efforts led me to become Vice Chair and then Chair of the Patent Litigation Committee, which led to a seat on the Board of Directors, and now, here I am as President. It’s the path that every President before me took, and the ones that those after me will likely follow as well. I assure you that the journey has been filled with wonderful, invaluable experiences, and I have been in the company of people who have become lifelong friends and colleagues. More directly, let me say that if I can do it – you can do it too.

By the way, if people want help in getting involved, AIPLA has a great mentoring committee that will set up one-on-one mentors. And there are many committees that would be of interest, based upon areas of practice. In short, like so many other opportunities in life, AIPLA can be what you make of it. So who knows? In a few years I may be sitting at my desk and reading your musings as President of AIPLA.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Nick Redfearn and Khanh Nguyen of Rouse discuss Vietnam’s latest identification in the 2026 Special 301 Report and how the country is taking genuine steps to meet US expectations
Tatiana Campello reflects on 30 years of practising at the firm, and urges women IP attorneys to think beyond the day-to-day
A David v Goliath battle involving TikTok, and Via Licensing Alliance adding new members to its Voice Codec patent pool, were also among the top talking points
Latham & Watkins bolstered its IP litigation bench in California with the addition of Kieran Kieckhefer, as partner demand for trial-ready expertise shows no sign of slowing
With the launch of a new patent eligibility AI tool, Sterne Kessler is leading a growing movement of law firms taking AI development into their own hands
UPC cases are (very) gradually becoming more distributed across other local divisions outside Germany, which can only be good news for the pan-European forum
Clarification concerning jurisdictional reach and latest stats released by the court were also among the top talking points in recent weeks
Although unanimous decision by the top court clarifies several aspects of the honest concurrent use defence, practitioners say ambiguities remain
Tristan Sherliker says he hopes to solve an access to justice issue by making the automated court bundle tool free to use
The team, comprising two partners and one senior consultant, plans to offer “highly differentiated” services to clients
Gift this article