| ||||||||
|
|
The following information is for guidance only. We do not purport to provide a legal opinion with respect to these matters and our specific advice should be sought in each particular case. Trademark Guidelines for Registration
A trade mark is a sign which can distinguish your goods and services from
those of other traders. A sign includes, for example, words, logos, pictures or
a combination of these. You can use your trade mark as a marketing tool so that
customers can recognise your products or services. What you need to consider before making your application
The following are the main points you need to think about carefully before
sending us your application.
How can you avoid your mark falling into these categories?
Make sure your trade mark is a distinctive word, logo, picture or other sign
that will clearly identify your goods or services from those of other traders. Made-up words, logos or pictures are normally distinctive unless they have
become customary in your line of trade. Even normal dictionary words may be acceptable as long as they do not fall foul of these guidelines. If
you think that the examiners are unlikely to agree that your trade mark is
distinctive, you may want to consider including a prominent invented word, logo
or picture in your mark. (Don't forget that you cannot alter your trade mark
once we have submitted your application form, so we can only consider the mark
you put on the form.) If
what you include stands out enough and is distinctive in relation to your goods
or services, it may avoid the type of objection explained in this section. For
example, most people would not consider the mark COFFEE
SHOP to be distinctive for cafes. The mark BATMORE COFFEE SHOP, on the other
hand, would be distinctive as the public would see BATMORE as being a trade
mark. In
the same way, QUALITY
HANDBAGS could hardly be considered distinctive for handbags; but FRISHCOSS
QUALITY HANDBAGS could be distinctive as FRISHCOSS would be seen as a trade
mark. ***The
information above is only guidance. We do not purport to provide a legal
opinion with respect to these matters and our specific advice should be sought
in each particular case. We cannot guarantee that these guidelines will
avoid any objections, as each case is considered on its own merits.*** Common misconceptions
They will possibly not accept words, logos, pictures or other signs which
are unlikely to be seen as a trade mark by the public just because they are:
Please also remember that registering a company name or an Internet domain name with a registrar, does not mean you will automatically receive approval for that name as a trade mark. They will also not accept marks which are:
Prepared by Beth Anne Gray J. |
|
|