A Registered Trademark and the Application Process

Starting a business involves compliance with a lot of regulations, laws and rules. Local permits need to be obtained, as well as state permits and registrations. The list would seem endless so, since all of these matters need to be attended to any way, why not add another important one and register your trademark?

 

A trademark is classified as an intellectual property. Like any other property, your ownership of it needs to be protected. The best way to do this is to register the trademark as your property. The process takes time and you will need to be patient.

You go into business after a great deal of research and planning with the expectation to succeed. In the process, you will want to safeguard all your rights to the business and part of that will be by registering your trademark in the form of a logo, words or device.

Getting a trademark registered is fairly simple. You can get the necessary application forms from the local office of the USPTO or you can download the same from their website. Submitting the application is also simple. It is the time that it takes for registration after submission that is most annoying and calls for patience.

It isn't a complicated process and the first step is to conduct a thorough search to ensure that there is no other trademark similar to the one you propose to register. It is best that this is left to professionals. The next step is to fill out the application form and submit it at the office of the USPTO or online on their website. At this stage, the USPTO usually assigns an attorney for the application. The attorney will assist you in clarifying all aspects of your application to the USPTO through correspondence. Since the USPTO is a department of the government, some time lag is to be expected.

The USPTO normally takes about two months to acknowledge receipt of your application by sending you a post card. After that, for about six months or more, you can expect them to be totally silent. Then they are likely to send you a communication advising you that your application has been accepted. A month or so after this, they will publish the details and invite objections if any. In the meantime, they may ask you for clarifications. Be prompt in replying to avoid any delay from your side. After this, you will finally get a communication advising you of the registration. The whole process is likely to take about a year or more.

If nothing seems to be happening after you have submitted your application, instead of worrying about the delay, get on with your business and build up the trademark. Delays are standard operating procedures for the USPTO.

While it is not legally binding to register a trademark, those that do gain a distinct advantage over those that do not. Your right to use the trademark exclusively is given total protection when you register it. No one else can use it and confuse your customers. If someone tries to, you can take legal recourse and protect your rights.

Infringements, accidental or intentional are part of the business scene. If registered trademarks protect your products and services, legal protection is available for you. Using the symbol of the letter R within a circle establishes your rights in trade circles and throughout the country.

If you are running a business without valid and registered trademarks, do consider the alternative advantage of registering. Get an application form today and get on with it.



 

Trademarks Recommended Products


Porcelain Marks European News

Asia Week NY rolls out an 8-day extravaganza of gallery open houses and museum ... - Art Daily


Asia Week NY rolls out an 8-day extravaganza of gallery open houses and museum ...
Art Daily
The rarest and finest Asian examples of porcelain, jewelry, paintings, ceramics, sculpture, books, bronzes, prints, photographs, and jades constitute the rich offerings at the 33 specialist gallery presentations, some of which are being unveiled to the ...

and more »

Read more...


Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875 - Ahram Online


Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
Ahram Online
"Virtually all of the tiles were produced in the kilns of Iznil in northeastern Anatolia, a city that was an important centre of pottery production long before the Ottoman conquest," she elucidates. Dobrowolska's portrait of a haunted age might be ...

Read more...


China No Match for Dutch Plants as Philips Shavers Come Home - BusinessWeek


China No Match for Dutch Plants as Philips Shavers Come Home
BusinessWeek
Set up as gateway into Europe, with five major sea docks and the Schiphol airport near Amsterdam, the Dutch have managed to maintain a current-account surplus since 1981, Leen said. Standard & Poor's affirmed its AAA long-term credit rating on the ...

and more »

Read more...


China No Match for Dutch Plants as Philips Shavers Come Home - Bloomberg


Bloomberg

China No Match for Dutch Plants as Philips Shavers Come Home
Bloomberg
Set up as gateway into Europe, with five major sea docks and the Schiphol airport near Amsterdam, the Dutch have managed to maintain a current-account surplus since 1981, Leen said. Standard & Poor's affirmed its AAA long-term credit rating on the ...

and more »

Read more...


European Waterways "Panache" Luxury Hotel Barge "Says It with Flowers" on ... - PR.com (press release)


European Waterways "Panache" Luxury Hotel Barge "Says It with Flowers" on ...
PR.com (press release)
New York, NY, January 14, 2012 --(PR.com)-- Holland, the world Mecca for flowers, is the colorful “back yard” for European Waterways' newest addition to its fleet, the Panache, whose inaugural cruises begin in April. The classic 12-passenger Dutch ...

Read more...



Sponsored Links

 

 

Site Navigation

Recommended