Companies spend a lot of time and money finding great names for
themselves and their products. Many do it right and employ naming
agencies and intellectual property trademark counsel to thoroughly
search in advance to make sure they are legally clean, and then
claim and register their names correctly. Your marketing team
builds the website, prints your business cards and collateral,
makes your signs and packaging, and are always careful to use
the proper and ® signs appropriately.
But
what happens next? How do you know when someone else comes along
and claims the same names or marks? Who will alert you? Who will
chase them away? In short, where are the trademark police and
protection squads? You've seen them on TV in high profile cases
stopping goods at customs that are fake copies. You've read about
major seizures of pirated software copies and titles, not to mention
fake games and videos that look close to the real thing. But these
are genuine fraud cases of direct copies and they are policed
and enforced with normal police powers - albeit usually only when
alerted by the offended parties.
But
what if someone just uses the same name for a confusingly similar
product in your own space through ignorance or stubbornness or
simply accident?
There
are no trademark police! It is a self-policing system. If someone
else uses your trademarks, and you ignore them, they might keep
on doing so. Eventually they may even grow and prosper, and have
bigger marketing budgets and more lawyers than you! They may even
argue for implied trademark rights because of continued unopposed
usage.
So,
please police your own trademarks. Use a professional to check
them before you claim them. And then put in a simple process to
check regularly. Major brand companies like Sony or IBM or GE
or Proctor and Gamble have paralegals who log on every morning
to check on the status of all new names and filings. Plus they
use services to alert them to any usage or close filings and claims
on any of their trademarks.
You
probably do not have full time counsel to watch your names, but
any company can take these simple precautions: