Thursday, September 12, 2013

Startups, Will Your Brand Name Get You Into Trademark Trouble?


 
Startups, Will Your Brand Name Get You Into Trademark Trouble?

Author: Eric Everson JD/MBA/MSIT-SE

As a startup, your brand often means so much to the success of your company.  If your brand is confusing or if consumers fail to find the link between your brand and your products/ services, it can be catastrophic for your future.  When looking for the right brand name, a startup must be especially careful not to hedge into the lethal ground of trademark infringement.  As Forbes Contributor, Jess Collins recently noted, “In the real world of trademark law, a stronger mark has more value and greater ability to exclude others from using not only the same name, but also anything too similar.”

Whether you’re starting a local services company or the next global technology superstar, you have to be careful not to use a brand that some other company has already worked to establish.  So, where do you start?  In everybody’s favorite Dummies Series’, How to Trademark Your Brand Name, recommends that you start by creating a list of 500-1000 variations that you want to consider.  The book’s authors also cautiously point out, “Coming up with a name that appeals to consumers and gaining a nod of approval from your trademark attorney is a challenging, frustrating, and even painful process.”

So how do you know if your brand is likely to lead you into trademark infringement?  Trademark lawyer’s use a “likelihood of confusion” standard, which like all things in law is not as black and white as it may seem.  Often the legal hurdle a brand name must clear boils down to whether is it probable, under all of the circumstances, that consumers of the relevant goods will be confused.  The gray area however comes in navigating a tangled mess of case law that depending on the unique nature of each name may give some indication on which way things would fall if the court should get involved.  Attorney Rich Stem gives a more thorough review, where he also notes, “The protection afforded to a trademark owner may extend to related goods.”

In an age that increasingly embraces crowdfunding and provides for a faster concept-to-consumer cycle than at any other time in history, trademark infringement is on the rise. This is not a risk limited to small businesses as even Microsoft recently lost their trademark battle for the brand name SkyDrive against British Sky Broadcasting Group (BskyB).  In all cases, adopting a brand name becomes a business decision between risk and opportunity.  Will your brand name get you into trademark trouble?  Britis

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About the Author:  Eric Everson is software engineer with a law degree.  Passionate about matters of global intellectual property, prior to law school he earned an MBA and Masters in Software Engineering.  As the former Chief Technical Officer of MyMobiSafe.com, he is a ten year veteran technology executive within the telecommunications industry. He is a regular contributor, author, and consultant where technology and business intersect with the law.  The views and opinions presented in this blog are his own and are not to be construed as legal advice.  Follow: @iamtechlaw

Tags: Startup, Brand, Brand name, trademark, trademark infringement, intellectual property, trademark clearance, tradename, similarity, confusion, distinctiveness, WIPO

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