As the Co-Founder and the day-to-day manager of inventRight’s operations for over twenty years, Andrew has seen it all—and coached inventors through it. “At this point, our students have experienced every scenario you can possibly imagine,” he said. “Whether it’s communicating with a company that has never licensed an idea from an outside inventor before or signing a multi-million dollar deal, we’ve done it.” He continues to be inspired by the opportunity to work with people who are not only passionate about their ideas, but also committed to making money from them.He began coaching inventors over nineteen years ago as the President of the Inventors’ Alliance group in the San Francisco Bay Area. Andrew grew Inventors’ Alliance into one of the most active and well-established associations in the inventors’ community across the country. His expertise in the field of innovation was federally recognized when he was asked to advise the last president council on what changes could be made to the United States Patent and Trademark Office to better serve independent inventors. He has also been featured on National Public Radio’s Science Friday and as a licensing expert at USPTO conferences.Over the last 20 years, Andrew and his business partner Stephen Key have grown inventRight into a business that has students in over 50 countries. InventRight students are actively engaged in taking action with their ideas to get them licensed. InventRight goes beyond the old patents and prototypes trap inventors find themselves in and into the real world of licensing their ideas to big companies that can bring their products to market. Many years ago, spurred by the feeling that the Bay Area was getting just a little too crowded, Andrew moved to Henderson, Nevada with his wife, where they are raising their daughter.“At inventRight, every day someone tells us how much we’ve helped them, and that means the world to me.”http://www.inventright.com