Using the Rights Availability Map

Created by Francesco Ilardi, Modified on Mon, 1 May, 2023 at 9:21 PM by Francesco Ilardi

As a property owner, you can extend your property into multiple categories and sell across various territories. To help you visualize these opportunities, each property includes a 'Rights Availability Map.'

Note: You have to be a property owner in order to use the 'Rights Availability Map.'

 

Choosing Categories and Territories of Interest

  1. Go to the 'Properties' screen.

  2. Add a new property or edit an existing one.

  3. Scroll down and click on the 'Add Categories and Territories' button.

  4. Click on the 'Categories' box and check all the relevant categories you want to add. Your selections will appear on the right-hand side.

  5. Click on the 'Back' button if you want to combine these categories with territories, or click on 'Save' if you are done.

  6. Click on the 'Territories' box and check all the relevant territories you want to add. Your selections will appear on the right-hand side.

  7. Click on the 'Save' button to save the selected combination.

  8. Click on the 'Add Categories and Territories' button again to define additional combinations if needed.

  9. Finish adding or updating the property. The combinations defined are displayed on the left side of the property details view.

Reading the Map

1. Define any combinations of categories and territories you are interested in (rights combinations) as described above.

 

2. On the right side of the property details screen, you will see the 'Rights Availability Map.'

 

3. Each country you defined in the rights combinations will be highlighted in blue.

 

 

4. Click on any highlighted country and a tooltip will open. It displays how many categories are not covered by any licensing contracts. Click on 'View all' to see the full list of categories.

 

5. Click on the 'Filter' and choose 'Categories' in order to drill down by category instead of territory. Note: If a country is not highlighted, it is either not defined in a rights combination or is already fully covered by licensing contracts.

 

 


Was this article helpful?

That’s Great!

Thank you for your feedback

Sorry! We couldn't be helpful

Thank you for your feedback

Let us know how can we improve this article!

Select at least one of the reasons
CAPTCHA verification is required.

Feedback sent

We appreciate your effort and will try to fix the article