subject: 3 Reasons To Perform A Trademark Clearance Report Before You Begin Use Of A New Trademark [print this page] 3 Reasons to Perform a Trademark Clearance Report Before You Begin Use of a New Trademark
We are often asked by our prospective customers why should I perform a trademark clearance report? Our answers are always the same. Here are the top 3 reasons why we feel you should always conduct Trademark Research in the form of a Trademark Clearance Report prior to adopting and beginning use of your new trademark.
1. U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) Filing Fees Are Non-Refundable
First and foremost filing fees paid to the USPTO are non-refundable. In other words, if you file for your mark and your mark is ultimately block based upon a likelihood of confusion with an existing mark you have forfeited the cost of your filing fees paid to the USPTO in the filing of your Trademark Application.
A trademark clearance report, even one as simple as a Basic Federal Database Search which costs a fraction of what it costs to file for protection of a trademark with the USPTO, is often a cost-effective method to evaluate whether your mark is clear to be registered and, if so, whether you should proceed forward with filing for the Trademark Registration or decide upon another mark if the same is not available.
2. Dont Develop a Brand You May Be Forced to Give Up
Second, a Comprehensive U.S. Trademark Research Report one that includes a search of not only the USPTOs databases but also state trademark and corporate databases will not only let you know if your trademark is clear to registered but also whether you are likely to infringe upon anothers use of an already-existing trademark whether it be filed with the USPTO or not.
Note, trademarks are not required to be registered with the USPTO to be afforded protection state and federal protection. Rights to trademarks can be acquired merely by use thereof or what is generally referred to as at common law.
So imagine the scenario, you are a California restaurateur. You come up with what you think is a unique name, lets say Suntopia. You open your first restaurant in Los Angeles. Since you came up with the name you figure it must be available so no research report is performed. Business is great. You open a second location in Palm Springs and later a third in Las Vegas. You register the trademark with the USPTO and life is good. A few years go by and you are now famous. Your restaurants are the toast of the town. You routinely appear on the Jay Leno show as a celebrity guest chef. And then one day you get a letter from a law firm in Florida. The letter reads Dear so in so ... our client has been using the mark Suntopia in connection with a chain of restaurants in the States of Florida and Georgia for over twenty years. We demand you immediately change your name. P.S. Loved you on Leno. The pesto-encrusted sea bass was great.
Youre crushed. How could this be? You came up with the mark in a dream sequence fit for a Hollywood film. This must be your trademark.
Sadly who wins? More likely than not the Flori-Georgians. Who looses? You do. What happens to the years of blood sweat and tears building your brand Suntopia? Gone. And to think, all of this could have been resolved if only you would have spent a few dollars up front and had a trademark clearance report performed. Then you would have known to come up with another mark instead of spending years of your life and countless resources building up anothers pre-existing brand.
After all, as most practitioners and entrepreneurs know alike, it is the enterprise that creates the brand. The brand does not create the enterprise.
3. Having a Trademark Clearance Report Performed Is Evidence of Your Reasonableness in Adopting a Trademark
Third, did you know that should you ever get sued for trademark infringement the fact that you had a clearance report issued which cleared the adoption and use of your mark may be used as evidence in that case as evidence of your reasonableness in adopting the mark.
Trademark litigation counsel love it when an accused infringer did not perform a trademark clearance report. In the hands of a skilled lawyer this can be manipulated into showing a callous disregard as to the existing trademark rights of others by the purported infringing defendant.
But if you have a trademark clearance report performed, and if that report clears use of your mark, the opposite may be true. Should you ever be sued over the use of the trademark your lawyer can mount a defense on the reasonableness of your selection of the mark backed by objective evidence at or before the critical point of adoption of the mark: your trademark clearance report.
Conclusion
So whenever considering the adoption of a new trademark, be you a small start-up business or a multinational corporation rolling out new product after new product, remember to always have a trademark clearance report performed before you begin use of your mark. It is well worth the investment.