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IP is the New Black

November 9, 2012 By Leona Charles

Last night I learned the best business information that I have heard in quite a while from Oliff & Berridge, PLC wait for it-Intellectual Property Rights. In building our empires we are so caught up in success and growth that we don’t think about risk.  After you have spent years building your brand recognition and customer base, how easy is it for someone to come along and tell you that your brand is not your own and you must immediately stop using it?  Here are a few of the nuggets I learned; maybe they will be as useful to you.

Know your IP Topic and how it applies to your business

There are four types of intellectual property topics, the key to good IP protection is knowing which one applies to your company.

Copyright Law- this is creative expression, how you present your information. Not the information, but how you present it.

Trademark Law- this is how you brand your business.

Law-this refers to your ideas, inventions and designs.

Trade Secret Law-this applies to the proprietary information of your company and your clients.

You don’t have to use a symbol for your material to have a copyright

The first rule of copyright that I learned was that copyright applies to the creative expression, not the ideas themselves. So while you may have the next big idea, copyright will only protect how you tell people about that idea. The second rule of copyright is that it has to be in a fixed tangible medium, in other words it has to be written down on something. As soon as it is written, it is copyrighted.

Customers decide your brand

When competing companies have similar branding who gets awarded the trade mark is decided by the potential confusion of the customer. So if you have a restaurant that starts in New York and a new restaurant opens with a name so similar that customers confuse it for the original, it has failed the trademark test. If customers confuse you with a competitor, please pack your knives and go home.

You are on the hook for your client’s trade secrets

Trade secrets are the life blood of a consultant, but all business to business services deal with trade secrets to some degree. What you don’t know is that if you aren’t careful about protecting your client’s trade secrets and their competitors come to have knowledge of that information, you are on the hook for infringement.

All in all it was enough to make me sit up and listen and the questions flying in the room were fast and furious. As a business owner you have a responsibility to protect your business and that includes protecting your brand.

*This information is not legal advice, Oliff and Berridge aren’t presenting any legal advice and if you have any question about your IP, you should contact your attorney.

Leona Charles

Leona Charles began SPC Business Consulting Ltd in 2007 to help businesses of all sizes get the most out of their performance. As a Six Sigma Black Belt, she brings a fresh and unique approach to Operations Consulting drawing on her 10 years of combined experience in law enforcement, government contracting, property management, customer service, non profit industry, and education.

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Filed Under: Female Entrepreneurs, Women Business Owners, Women On Business Roundtable Tagged With: branding, branding for female entrepreneurs, corporate branding, female bloggers. branding, female board members, female business owners, female CEOs, female COO, female entrepreurs, Female Executives, female leadership, intellectual property, online branding, small business branding, small business IP, small business owners, women in business, Women small business owners

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