Intellectual Property Audits: Taking Stock of Your Intangibles

Most companies routinely perform inventory audits of their physical assets…but — even though it’s not always on the radar — performing audits of intangible assets is equally (and perhaps even more) important.

The objective of an IP audit is to identify and protect intellectual property assets that provide you with Audit Rubber Stamp Shows Financial Accounting Examinationa competitive advantage and promote the goodwill of your business.  By creating a process to identify and take steps to protect intellectual property at least once a year (and perhaps more frequently if IP is a major component of your business), you can ensure that valuable assets are not made public, or otherwise lost or compromised, prior to taking the appropriate actions to protect them.  An intellectual property audit and due diligence review should also be performed in connection with mergers and acquisitions and other buy/sell transactions, as well as financing transactions that affect IP assets.

Typical intellectual property assets include product, service and company names and logos (trademarks), website content, written materials, and creative works (copyrights), formulas, processes, product designs and inventions (patents), and proprietary customer lists and other confidential information, such as pricing data and vendor information (trade secrets). Depending on your industry and the types of products and services you offer, there may be other intellectual property assets to consider.  These items should be identified and reviewed on a regular basis.

An audit should include a variety of information, such as:

  • Name/Description of IP – Identification of mark or domain name, title of copyright or patent
  • Subject of IP – List of goods/services, copyrighted material, description of patent
  • Status of IP – Application and registration number(s), intent-to-use or actual use-based mark, upcoming filing deadlines, IP not protected, related litigation or other disputes or issues
  • When/How/Where the IP Has Been Used – Dates of first use/publication, where/how IP used/published, U.S./International use, and any licenses or agreements regarding the IP
  • Chain of Title – IP owner(s), list of all IP transfers, note any transfers that have not been recorded, note any gaps in the record of ownership

Once your intellectual property has been itemized, you should determine whether any additional protections or updates to existing protections are necessary.  You should also review company policies and agreements with employees, independent contractors and licensees regarding the creation, use and protection of your (or third party) IP assets, as well as confidentiality and non-compete protections.  Additionally, your social media, website and insurance policies should be reviewed, as well as your advertising and marketing materials.  You may also consider whether you need to implement systems to monitor unauthorized use of your IP assets by others and address how to approach infringement scenarios.

Internal IP audits are a great start, but you should consider consulting with an IP attorney to ensure all of your IP has been identified and is protected.

 

Unusual Trademarks Hiding in Plain Sight

Most people usually think of a trademark as a word, slogan or logo associated with a specific company, creative project, product or service (and often the quality of the products or services).  For example, some people strongly prefer consuming soft drinks labeled 220px-Pepsi_logo_svg  as opposed to coke-logo-1, while others would only buy tennis shoes marked with Nikeinstead of Adidas_Logoor logo_REEBOK_ICON_1 , and some may prefer this band  Rolling-Stones-Wallpaper-classic-rock-17732124-1024-768 to this one grateful_dead_bear-265x300.  However, a trademark can consist of almost anything that is used to identify and distinguish the goods or services of one entity from those manufactured, sold or provided by others. You might have a mark worthy of protection and don’t even realize it.  Perhaps your mark:

Sounds like a trademark…

There are registered marks for chimes, sayings associated with animated characters, and even theme songs.  Universal TV LLV has a registration that consists of “two musical notes, a strike and a rapid rearticulation of a perfect fifth pitch interval, which in the key of C sounds the notes C and G, struck concurrently” used in connection with the “entertainment services, namely, a series of on-going dramatic television programs”…although you probably know it better as the NBC Chimes.

Whether or not you eat carbs, you are likely familiar with the Pillsbury Doughboy.  If you’re reading this blog, you would likely recognize Yahoo!  And you might get excited when you hear this from your computer.  If you use a sound in connection with your products or services that (1) does not serve any functional purpose in connection with the products or services, (2) is not a natural by-product of the products or services, and (3) is not used by competitors or applicant’s industry in connection with the goods or services, you likely have something distinctive that consumers will associate with your products or services.  For more examples of sound marks, click here.

Smells like a trademark…

If Smead Manufacturing made apple cider, peppermint, vanilla, peach, lavender, and grapefruit scented lotion, they probably couldn’t protect the fragrance because it would be considered to serve a utilitarian purpose and be functional in connection with the product…but it’s a different story when those scents are used in connection with “office supplies, namely, file folders, hanging folders, paper expanding files.”  And, if you don’t like the smell of regular “medicated transdermal patches for the temporary relief of aches and pains of muscles and joints associated with arthritis, simple backaches, strains, bruises and sprains,” then you may want to try some that have “a minty scent by mixture of highly concentrated methyl salicylate (10wt%) and menthol (3wt%)”.

Looks like a trademark…

I don’t know of many women who wouldn’t immediately recognized a box or bag in a specific “shade of blue often referred to as robin’s-egg blue” as coming from the famous jeweler Tiffany & Co. The color pink for “foam insulation for use in building and construction” is registered to Owens-Corning Fiberglas Technology Inc. Of course, Coca-Cola has protected its iconic bottle designCoke_Bottle for decades…and the Oscar award statuetteAcademy_Award_trophyis also protected.

Feels like a trademark…

American Wholesale Wine & Spirits, Inc. has a mark which consists of “a velvet textured covering on the surface of a bottle of wine” for use in connection with wines.

Tastes like a trademark…????

Not yet…and potentially never.  The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board has observed that it is unclear how a flavor could function as a source indicator because flavor or taste generally performs a utilitarian function, and consumers generally have no access to a product’s flavor or taste prior to purchase.  In re N.V. Organon, 79 USPQ2d 1639 (TTAB 2006) (affirming refusal to register “an orange flavor” for “pharmaceuticals for human use, namely, antidepressants in quick-dissolving tablets and pills,” on the grounds that the proposed mark was functional under §2(e)(5) and failed to function as a mark within the meaning of §§1, 2, and 45 of the Trademark Act.).

Obtaining registration for some of these more unusual marks (usually categorized as trade dress) are more likely to require a showing of evidence of “acquired distinctiveness” (proof that the mark has become adequately associated in consumers’ minds with the mark owner’s goods or services) than more traditional marks.  However, don’t let that discourage you.  By opening your mind and looking for marks outside of the traditional name, logo or slogan categories, you just may find a sound, color, scent or other sensory trigger that strongly appeals to your customers or fans and turns out to be something that helps you stand out from the crowd and gets you a step ahead of the competition.