When establishing your branding and ensuring the protection of your brand, you inevitably deal with legal issues. When you do, keep three key points in mind.

First, your brand is best protected when you comprehensively cover all your bases: copyright, patent registration, and trademarking of your name and symbols. Don't just focus on one or two; you need to take care of all three.

Second, you need to aggressively protect your patents and copyrights; be thorough with contracts, ensure secrecy, and keep on top of legal filings.

Third, move quickly, because your competition is just around the corner; if you have something to protect, register it as soon as possible.

Nine Legal Issues

Protecting your product or business brand, one of the most fundamental aspects of your market presence, is not something that should be taken lightly or ignored.

From the very beginning of your business, you need to create and maintain a solid intellectual property (IP), patent, and copyright strategy that protects your own brand while keeping you safe from accusations of infringement by others.

So, how do you go about securing your business brand and other IP via copyright, patent, and trademark? Here are tips on nine key legal issues you need to take care of.

Protecting Your Patents

Patents can cover any sort of physical product or invention, development process, or piece of software technology. Though patents do not properly qualify as part of an IP and trademark/branding framework, they are related.

Make sure you adhere to the following three tips.

1. Maintain trade secrecy

Stay quiet about your pending patents and intellectual property developments. You don't need to force anyone who enters your office into signing a non-disclosure agreement (NDA), but you do need to maintain a controlled system of information flow that allows development detail to filter down only to those who actually need to know. Sensitive information should be kept secret until you have a patent pending or in effect.

2. Enforce formal ownership agreements for IP

Create a formal contract agreement among you, your product developers, and other founders or partners of your business venture. Ensure that a clear agreement exists on who gets what ownership stakes in any pending patents and how intellectual property will be divided among all those included. Furthermore, enforce clear contractual claims on any pending IP or patents so that your developers can't later claim partial ownership without prior agreement.

3. Patent your inventions and IP as soon as possible

Patent your IP and inventions as quickly as you can. Initially, to save money, don't worry about international patents, just focus on domestic protection and save yourself the money until it becomes a more pressing issue if you grow internationally. An excellent temporary protection strategy is the "provisional patent"—actually, a "provisional application for patent"— which allows you to temporarily protect your IP and inventions with much less bureaucratic hassle while you're waiting for a formal patent approval.

Trademark Registration

Trademark protection is the core of an effective branding protection strategy; it is what covers all of your business specific logos, trademarks, and words or phrases.

Adhere to the following four guidelines.

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Your Brand and Nine Legal Issues Related to Patent, Trademark, and Copyright

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Brett Gold is a writer who covers small business attorneys in Chicago, including Hays Firm LLC. He has worked in the legal industry for 10+ years.