An interview with award winner Margot Fröhlinger

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

An interview with award winner Margot Fröhlinger

Frohlinger

Margot Fröhlinger gave a memorable speech on receiving an outstanding achievement trophy at this year’s Managing IP Global Awards Dinner in London. Afterwards, she spoke to Alice O’Donkor about her role in creating the Unitary Patent and UPC





Awards Frohlinger
Margot Fröhlinger

When she heard that she had been selected as the recipient of one of Managing IP’s outstanding achievement awards, Margot Fröhlinger’s first thought was:“Do I really deserve this?”

She pondered for about 30 seconds, she says, before thinking: “Probably, yes!” though she modestly adds: “I don’t deserve it as an individual, but as a representative of a whole group of people who have been working very hard to bring this project to life.”

Fröhlinger was chosen for the award due to her many years of work at the European Commission and now at the EPO, where she is principal director patent law and multilateral affairs.

“I have been working on the Unitary Patent since 2007. I would describe the experience as saying that it was an enormous challenge. It was sometimes very hard but it was also a great, great experience because of the people I had the chance to meet and to work with,” she told Managing IP.

“I had my colleagues formerly in the European Commission and now my colleagues in the European Patent Office but most of all, I had to work with a broad variety of different people from the outside world. These were prominent patent judges and lawyers as well as patent professionals and industry representatives. It was a whole community developing around this project. People who were extremely dedicated, extremely committed to spend part of their leisure time, even weekends, contributing to this project and that was a great experience.”

Despite many obstacles along the way, this work culminated in a 2013 agreement between most EU member states to set up a Unitary Patent and Unified Patent Court. The agreement ended decades of deadlock since a single EU patent system was first proposed. It is now expected to come into effect early next year.

“We had to be extremely creative to overcome all types of legal and political difficulties and to find solutions to seemingly unsurmountable problems. That is something that was hard at times, but also very enjoyable,” said Fröhlinger.

She also paid tribute to the “enthusiasm and commitment” to a European project at a time when, in many people’s eyes, the EU does not seem to be moving forward.

One lesson she learned, she said, was not to dwell on difficulties: “You should just think of getting things done and that is amazing what you can do if you are not looking for credit – if you are just trying to get things done.”

Since leaving the European Commission, Fröhlinger has been working at the EPO helping to set up the procedures for the Unitary Patent, and assisting the UPC Preparatory Committee. There is still much work to do before it is ready, she says: “The Unitary Patent is ready; we are trying very hard to help to bring the Unified Patent Court to life.”

Fröhlinger was one of two outstanding awards winners at the Global Awards this year, the other being Professor Joachim Bornkamm. For details of previous outstanding achievement winners at the Global and North America Awards, see our Awards page.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

In other news, Australia’s IP office has announced expanded search options, and an EPO report shed light on slow progress relating to women inventors in Europe
Managing IP speaks with up-and-coming women lawyers at five law firms about fighting imposter syndrome, maintaining work-life balance and why real representation matters
Kilpatrick’s managing partner for San Francisco discusses taking the longer route to partnership, the importance of female mentors, and strengthening office culture
Home-working and grace periods at IP offices have been announced, while Managing IP understands Iran’s IP office is out of service
With INTA 2026 just two months away, London-based IP practitioners offer tips on making the most out of the city
New platform, which covers SEPs for the Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 7 standards, includes 10 patent owners
The Texas-based IP litigation hires take King & Spalding’s partner appointments from pre-merger Winston & Strawn up to 12 this year
Sunny Su explains how her team overcame challenges with orchard evidence collection to secure a favourable plant variety decision from China’s top court
Flexible working firm continues trajectory from 2025 with appointment of Matthew Grant and Letao Qin
Anousha Davies, associate and trademark attorney at Birketts, unpicks how the university’s reputation enabled it to see off a proposed trademark for ‘Cambridge Rowing’
Gift this article