Intellectual Property Primer

Date and time

-

Location

225 Church Street NW
Huntsville Madison County Chamber of Commerce - 3rd Floor Toyota Room
Huntsville, AL 35801

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Organizer

Michelle Kloske
michelle.kloske@uah.edu
256-824-6422

Host organization

SBDC UAH

Type of event

Resource Partner event

Event description

This IP primer for small business owners should give you a solid understanding of how IP can protect your business and competitive edge. The takeaway points from the IP primer targeted would be:

  1. Understand the Types of IP: Patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets, and know-how protect different aspects of your business. Knowing which one applies can prevent loss of competitive advantage.
  2. Patents: If your business creates a new product, process, or technology, a patent gives you the exclusive right to make, use, or sell that invention for up to 20 years.
  3. Copyright: What is it, and how can one use it to their advantage.
  4. Trademarks Brand: A trademark protects your business’s name, logo, or slogan, ensuring that others can’t use them in a way that confuses customers or dilutes your brand’s identity.
  5. Trade Secrets: Trade secrets encompass proprietary processes, customer lists, or recipes. Maintaining confidentiality through contracts and secure measures is key to their protection.
  6. Know-how is Valuable Expertise: The knowledge and skills that make your business competitive (e.g., manufacturing methods) can be protected through confidentiality agreements with employees and partners.
  7. Registration Strengthens IP Protection: While some IP rights arise automatically, formal registration (especially for patents and trademarks) strengthens your ability to defend your rights in court.
  8. Contracts are Critical: Use non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) and other contracts to protect trade secrets, know-how, and other confidential information shared with employees, partners, or contractors.
  9. IP Strategy Can Boost Business Value: Properly protecting and managing your IP can enhance your business’s value, provide licensing opportunities, and protect against infringement.
  10. Enforcement Is Your Responsibility: IP protection only works if you enforce your rights. Be vigilant about unauthorized use, and be ready to take legal action if necessary.
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