5 Key Strategies For Protecting Your Ideas And Stopping People Ripping You Off!
5 Key Strategies For Protecting Your Ideas And
Stopping People Ripping You Off!
? Copyright 2005 Martin Truman
We have all had that Eureka moment when we think
we have thought of something new. Sometimes we
think there may even be a viable business behind it.
So how do you go about protecting that idea,
particularly if it is so fundamental and integral to the
success of your business model?
Ask yourself a few questions: Can I protect it so that
my competitors cannot copy me? How practical is it
to do so? How much will it cost me? Can I enforce it?
Is it really that unique? Would I be better off just
getting on and doing it?
To protect a business idea or model there are five
key areas not all of which will be relevant to a
particular business:
Law of confidence :C this is a general duty of
confidence which protects confidential information
and ideas from unauthorised use or disclosure and is
relevant to the early stages of a business idea or
model. You can disclose information and retain legal
protection from unauthorised use or further
disclosure if (a) the information is itself not trivial and
(b) it was disclosed in circumstances where an
obligation of confidence exists. Read more about
confidential agreements and non-disclosure
agreements here.
Copyright :C this protects the expression of ideas,
not the ideas themselves, for example, the software,
text, image or design. Particular care needs to be
taken with photography and website code. We have
seen many businesses that have been caught out
regarding ownership. The creator of a work will
usually be the first owner of the copyright but this
can be ?<assigned?\ to someone else which
effectively
transfers all rights. This may leave the creator with
something known as moral rights.
Patents :C protects ideas which are new unique
processes. The uniqueness needs to be proven as
part of the registration and this can be a formidable
and expensive hurdle. However, if you have a patent
you have an enforceable monopoly right over the
exploitation of that idea.
Trademarks :C these may be unregistered or
registered. If you have a brand which you need to
protect this could be for you. Do you know the
difference between the ? and ? symbols? Read our
mini-guide: Seven practical steps to protect your
intellectual property here.
Domain names :C arguably the modern day version
of
Trademarks, having key registered domains
(eg.123.com or truelegal.co.uk) can be more useful
and cheaper to obtain than trademarks, and be
sufficient to warn others off using that branding.
Design Rights :C like Trademarks these come in the
form of registered and unregistered rights, and may
be available to protect someone copying your
design. They are more easily registered than
patents and provide a useful and enforceable
deterrent.
Once you have these some or all of these rights you
can exploit them by licensing them to third parties. It
is best to formalise these into a Licensing Agreement
which needs careful drafting to obtain the maximum
protection of your investment to ensure royalties
and other licence income is secure.
Two great sites to look at if you are new to this field
are www.patent.gov.uk and the more user-friendly
and business focussed
www.intellectualproperty.gov.uk.
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Martin Truman is a commercial solicitor. He runs a
fully regulated law firm delivering no-nonsense legal
advice to UK businesses and business owners at an
affordable price. Discover more at www.legal-
advice-centre.co.uk/.
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