Should I Perform a Trademark Search?
Why do a Patent Search?
- Marketing, Advertising, Sales & PR
- Accounting, Taxation, and Reporting
- Professionalism & Career Development
-
Law, Transactions, & Risk Management
Government, Legal System, Administrative Law, & Constitutional Law Legal Disputes - Civil & Criminal Law Agency Law HR, Employment, Labor, & Discrimination Business Entities, Corporate Governance & Ownership Business Transactions, Antitrust, & Securities Law Real Estate, Personal, & Intellectual Property Commercial Law: Contract, Payments, Security Interests, & Bankruptcy Consumer Protection Insurance & Risk Management Immigration Law Environmental Protection Law Inheritance, Estates, and Trusts
- Business Management & Operations
- Economics, Finance, & Analytics
- Courses
Why Should I Perform a Trademark Search Before Registering a Trademark?
Trademark law is an area of intellectual property law. It concerns the ability to secure intellectual property rights in the symbols that represent the company. A “symbol” for purposes of trademark might include words, images, drawings, phrases, tunes, shapes, general appearance of the business (known as trade dress), or even colors.
Registering a trademark is generally done by filing an application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). Part of this process concerns doing a trademark search.
In this article, we describe the process for filing a trademark. Then we describe the reasons for performing a trademark search prior to registering a trademark with the USPTO.
What is Required to Federally Register a Trademark?
When a business files for trademark protection, the USPTO will examine various elements of the trademark. The first element is that the company must use the claimed trademark or symbol to publicly to represent the company or its products or services.
Next, for an expression to be subject to trademark protection, it must be “distinctive.” Distinctiveness means that the public readily is able to identify the symbol with a particular company, product, or service. That is, there is no risk of public confusion about what the symbol represents.
The symbol must meet an acceptable category for distinctiveness. The categories of distinctiveness are as follows:
• Fanciful - The symbol was made up and has no other meaning, significance, or business association outside of the company using it.
• Arbitrary - This when a company uses the symbol in a way that is considerably different from its general understanding. Using the symbol to represent the company, product, or service is so arbitrary that individuals easily associate the expression with the company.
• Suggestive - A suggestive mark in some way suggests the company, product, or service.
• Descriptive - A descriptive company name in some way describes what the company, product, or service is or does. To register a descriptive symbol, the company must demonstrate that the company has achieved “secondary meaning” beyond the descriptive nature of the word. This means that the general public would recognize the specific company, product, or service when the claimed descriptive mark is spoken, written, or shown.
• Generic - A generic symbol is not capable of protection. A symbol is generic when it is commonly associated with a class of product, service, or business — rather than representing the specific business.
If the mark can demonstrate distinctiveness, the next step is to make certain the mark is not already in use. The USPTO will determine whether the mark is being used by a business in any manner that may cause customer confusion. If so, this will destroy the ability to acquire federal trademark protections.
The alternative method for securing trademark protections is under state common or statutory law. Each state will recognize trademark rights for a mark used by a business in that state. Some states require registration pursuant to state statute. If so, the business will be required to meet the use and distinctiveness requirements of the state. Most states, however, provide common law protection without the requirement of registration. Basically, the first business to use a symbol capable of trademark protection to represent the business will receive automatic protection. This locks out later businesses (either new businesses or out-of-state businesses entering the state) from using a confusingly similar mark.
Note, securing state trademark rights would effectively destroy the ability of another business to secure federal trademark rights — as the symbol is already in use. This brings up the point that being the first to secure federal trademark protection through registration effectively establishes priority for trademark use in all states.
Why Conduct a Trademark Search Prior to Seeking Federal Registration?
In short, it will save you time and money. Also, it could provide you options in securing the trademark rights.
First, begin by doing a thorough search of the USPTO trademark database. This will allow you to do a word and image search for symbols that were previously filed with the office. If the trademark was previously filed and is still active, then there is no option for registering that exact mark. If, however, a previously-trademarked image has expired — there may be an opportunity to apply to register the mark for your business.
Next, you will need to do a common database search through online search engines, such as Google or Bing. The reason for such a search is to determine if your mark is being used to represent a business anywhere in the US. Generally, if the mark is very similar and represents a similar type of business, then the present use of the mark would likely interfere with federal registration. Knowing about such a use will allow you to make a case to the USPTO that your mark is sufficiently distinctive from this other mark to allow for federal registration. Remember, the standard is whether using the symbol will create some sort of customer confusion.
Lastly, you need to know if you are infringing upon the trademark of others. It would be truly disappointing to start your business operations using the symbol to represent your business, product, or services, only to find out that the mark is claimed by another business. This could lead to a trademark dispute under state or federal law between you and the other business. It can be very expensive to either defend your trademark use or to rebrand your business product, or service with a symbol that does not infringe upon another’s trademark rights.
Related Topics
- Intellectual Property Law (Intro)
- What is Intellectual Property?
- What is the purpose in granting intellectual property rights?
- What is required to capture or secure intellectual property rights?
- California Labor Code 2870
- What are Trade Secrets?
- Non-Disclosure Agreement
- Patents or patent rights?
- Letters Patent
- Primary types of patents?
- What Can I Patent?
- Requirements for a valid patent?
- Can your Invention be Patented?
- What is a Patentability Search?
- When is a Patentability Search Necessary?
- Why is a Patent Search Important?
- Requirements for a design patent?
- How to Do a Design Patent Search
- Cost of a Design Patent
- Requirements for a utility patent?
- Why Do You Need a Utility Patent?
- Plant Patent?
- Process for securing patent rights?
- Patent Search
- Basics of Doing a Patent Search
- 5 Rules for Effective Patent Searches
- What are Patent Databases?
- Tools for Patent Searches
- DIY Patent Search
- Understanding Patent Keyword Searches
- Patent Searches for Software
- Doing a European Patent Search
- WIPO Patent Search
- Cost of Doing a Patent Search
- Patent Search vs Patent Analysis
- Structure of a Patent
- Patent Filing Date
- Patent Attorney
- Do You Need a Patent Lawyer?
- Applying for Design patent
- Provisional Patent?
- Applying for Provisional Patent
- Doing a Provisional Patent Search
- How to Draw Up a Provisional Patent
- Converting a Provisional Patent to a Non-Provisional Patent
- What Does Patent Pending Mean?
- Process for enforcing ones patent rights?
- Patent Infringement
- Patent Troll
- What is a Trademark?
- Types of trademark?
- Requirements to capture trademark rights?
- Distinctiveness requirement for a Trademark?
- Determining whether a trademark is sufficient distinctive?
- What is Federal Trademark Registration?
- Conducting Trademark Search
- Should I Conduct a Trademark Search?
- Trademark Application
- Drawing a Trademark
- Filing for federal trademark registration?
- Protections of trademark rights under state law?
- Primary reasons for rejecting a trademark application?
- Common trademark designations?
- Trademark infringement?
- Enforce trademark rights?
- Demonstrate infringement of a trademark?
-
What is a copyright?
- Digital Millennium Copyright Act or DMCA Explained
- Basics of Copyright Law
- What are the rights of a holder of a copyright?
- What are the elements of a copyright?
- How long is the period of copyright protection?
- What is the process for registering a copyright?
- Who may claim and secure copyright protection?
- What are infringement and the process for enforcing a copyright?
- What are the defenses available against a claim of copyright infringement?
- Public Domain Works
- Licensing Agreement
- End User License Agreement
- What is Fair Use of copyright?
- What is the First Sale Doctrine?
- What international protections exist for intellectual property rights?
- Paris Convention