The proliferation of new product lines with distinct brand names has proven effective for helping wineries appeal to new groups of consumers, compete at a variety of price points, and move more cases without cannibalizing existing sales. In some cases, the winery makes no secret of the fact that their entire family of brands come from the same producer. But increasingly, wineries are finding it useful to separate their multiple personalities more thoroughly, in order to more convincingly do something different without influencing their established reputation. For the wine marketer, creating a new, distinct bottling trade name to go with a new brand name is the secret of success for creating an independent identity for a separate and unique
...to be passing of in this case, there has to be evidence of a misrepresentation, a likelihood of confusion on the part of the public and the likelihood of damage such as to the goodwill of the better known magazine. ...
Often the new brand must appear to be from a new winery crafted in the image of the market segment to be conquered. Just ask E & J Gallo how important it was to the total marketing package for Turning Leaf that the production statement said “produced and bottled by Turning Leaf Vineyards” and not E & J Gallo Winery. In this case, the proverbial elephant–the largest winery in the world–quite effectively hid behind a sapling–a line of mandatory information only 3 mm tall. Kendall-Jackson was sufficiently alarmed by the effectiveness of Gallo’s disguise to try to stop it in court.
But is it not only the mega-wineries creating new brands that benefit from the ease and
...registration in most states. Contact your state s secretary of state to find out the procedure for registering your trademark in the state where your business operates. Secondly, trademark protection can be obtained from the federal government for approximately $335. ...
...classes, distribution channels and customer matter too. You are affected by Common Law use (14 million), State Trademarks (500,000) and Federal Trademarks (2 million). Research is needed to make sure your trade name is legally available and it s best ...
Even retailers are getting involved. While specialty retailers like Trader Joe’s have sold private label wine for years, we are now seeing the emergence of bottling trade names owned by large retail chains, so that their house brand wines (and beers) can be bottled under the same trade name no matter where they were produced.
Regulatory nuts and bolts of creating a new market segment for your winery
Before proceeding, let’s take a moment to review the basic principles for working with trade names in the wine industry. Although the compliance department handles this for the marketers, a little insight into the procedures will help you understand the
...to keep abreast of the competition. For more complicated searches, a visit to the library can be done to review the various patents. Another way in which to research previously issued patents is to use the Patent and Trademark Office ...
Adding a bottling trade name to your basic permit in order to bottle under that name involves a two-step process. First, the trade name is registered with the local or state registrar of trade names. In California, trade names are registered with the County Clerk by filing a “fictitious business name” statement and publishing the statement in a local paper. In most of the other states, a trade name is registered as an “assumed business name” with the Secretary of State’s office.
In the second step, a copy of the filed trade name registration is sent to TTB’s National Revenue Center, along with an application to amend your basic permit (TTB F 5100.18)
...the differences between a patent, trademark and a copyright. Patent When can you file for a patent? If you have a novel and un-obvious invention, or a novel and un-obvious improvement to an existing invention, you can file for a ...
If the new trade name is owned by your winery and this is the first addition of that name to any permit in your state, you’re home free. But if another permittee in your state has already added the name to its permit–which could easily happen if you’re bottling for others–things can get more complicated.
In Napa County, where trade name swapping is common, the County Clerk will take multiple registrations of the same name without blinking an eye. But in some states and in some other counties in California, if a name has been registered to another entity, the County Clerk or Secretary of State’s office will not let you register the
...be broadly classified under Emotional family or a person names. For every Tata, Birla, Muthoot,Alukkas, Emotional names names there are a thousand obscure, unknown names.Geographical names can also feature here such as Malabar Gold,Tajmahal Tea, Kumarakom Lake Resort Practical (The ...
A similar problem arises if another permittee in your state is already using the trade name on its permit. In that case, TTB may refuse to process your application, because “the name is unavailable.” Again, a letter of permission from the previous user of the name will save the day. The operative sentence of the letter would read something like this: “We hereby grant (your winery’s name)
...only off-line but on-line as well and they even apply to domain names. Now, a trademark generally applies to goods where as a servicemark applies to services. For the purpose of this article I will refer to trademarks as the ...
When two permittees using the same trade name are located in different states, this problem will not arise. County Clerks and Secretary of State offices make no effort to keep track of name registrations outside their jurisdiction. TTB keeps a list of trade names used in the industry nationwide, and will inform permittees if a desired name is already in use elsewhere, but they will allow permittees in different states to use the same trade name without any permission or agreement. This policy is rooted in the presumption that most wineries are small operations that distribute in their local area only–a presumption
...communicate that the product is both protected under trademark law and is the property of the mark owner. An example of a trademark would be the M symbol used for McDonald's products: Anything produced by them would display the symbol ...
To be absolutely certain that you aren’t treading on someone else’s trade name before investing in a new image, we highly recommend conducting a name search of COLA records, trademark records, and common law name usage (trade directories, internet searches, etc.). You can hire a service to do
...enantiomers. The Patent comprised seven claims. Claim 1 was a product claim directed to the (+) enantiomer, claim 3 related to a pharmaceutical composition containing the claim 1 compound, and claim 6 related to a method of preparing that compound. ...
Wholesalers need to take extra care with trade names
Wholesalers and growers who are developing proprietary brands often run into problems with “their” bottling trade name, since the wineries who bottle for them must each add the trade name to their winery permits. If the initial trade name addition is done improperly–whether inadvertently or intentionally–it can make a name appear as if it belongs to the bottling winery, not the brand owner. Later, when the owner seeks to add the trade name to their own permit or to another’s winery’s permit for a subsequent bottling, they are unpleasantly surprised to find that they need the first winery’s “permission” to use the name.
...NOT had comprehensive research conducted on your business name, then you do not know if it's truly available. A common mistake many new business owners make is assuming that their business name is available simply because: the domain name was ...
Negociants and wholesalers developing their own brand should be careful to protect their rights to their chosen name. Being first to register the name with a state or local agency is recommended, and adding the name to their own basic permit, if any, before any wineries use the name is also wise.
And now, there’s an added incentive to do so: To help keep the ownership of names clearer and streamline the procedures for everyone, TTB has decided that as long as one permittee has registered a trade name, it may grant permission to other permit
...above mentioned two continuations, applications pending prior to August 21, 2007 in which two continuation or continuation-in-part applications have already been filed are allowed to have one additional continuation application filed without justification. This additional continuation application may be filed ...
Streamlined procedures for multiple users of the same name
In the old days, every winery that wished to use a name had to do its own local registration first in accordance with state or county requirements. Now, if a brand owner has wine bottled by multiple wineries, only the entity who owns the name needs to register the name. Once the brand owner has added the name to its permit, all the bottling wineries can add the name to their permit, for the account of the name’s owner, by simply submitting a letter of permission from the name owner and a statement
...registration of a trademark with the concerned authorities makes you the unique owner of a particular name or design and hence reduces possibilities of falsification or duplication in name. Check Before You Invest:It is suggested to undertake an assiduous search ...
This new procedure greatly simplifies the process for the bottling wineries and keeps the ownership of the name in TTB’s records very clear. The advantages of the system are so great, that it is well worth the extra effort for a brand owner to register its trade name(s) in every state where it has its product bottled, rather than relying on the bottling wineries to do it properly. If the brand owner is located out of state, they can do a local or state registration at the bottling winery’s address to fulfill the requirement for registering the name in the winery’s state.
...turn your idea into reality. With competitors lurking around every corner, you have to take care to protect your budding idea. What you really want to do is make sure you do not have competitors at all. You know how ...
Many in our industry continue to feel a false sense of security after they’ve registered a trade name or added it to a federal permit. Trade name registration laws do not guarantee that you “own” the registered name, nor protect you from someone else using it. The purpose of trade name registration is merely to provide public notice of the person or company who is using the trade name. Similarly, while adding a trade name to a basic permit allows the issuance of federal label approvals and gives notice that a particular winery is using the trade name, adding a trade name to a basic permit does not establish ownership
...rank well with the search engines. In addition, literal/functional names are thought to better inform visitors about what products and services are provided. While descriptive names do convey a sense of what you do, they fall short in creating an ...
In fact, TTB will allow other wineries to use your trade name without permission or question, as long as they are in different states. And, if challenged about conflicting claims to the same name in the same state, TTB refuses to take sides. The agency refers to the conflict as a “civil matter,” meaning it is left to the parties and the courts to decide who owns the name. Until the dispute is sorted out, TTB may be hesitant to allow the name to be added to additional permits–potentially causing unforeseen delays in bottling and marketing plans.
For these reasons, we always encourage anyone setting out to establish a new brand to first make
...a patent for this amazing invention otherwise you might find that it is stolen right from under your nose. It is very common to confuse patents with copyrights and trademarks. A patent basically grants the inventor trademark rights for his ...
We hope this article has given the marketers enough compliance know-how to keep you safe from pitfalls, and to make you dangerous–to your competitors! If so, you are well prepared to take advantage of the marketing power of multiple
...new patent is 20 years from the date on which theapplication for the patent was filed in the United States or, inspecial cases, from the date an earlier related application wasfiled, subject to the payment of maintenance fees. US patentgrants ...
End Note: Protecting Your Trade Names and Respecting the Names of Others
Since trade names are registered under state, not federal, law it is possible for two wineries to have registered the same trade name if they are different states. And, as the article explains, TTB will actually allow them both to use the same trade name for bottling without mutual consent. However, sharing a name is not a good idea. First, you risk consumers confusing your wines in the increasingly national wine market. Second, the winery with a head start on using the trade name may have the legal right to stop those who started later from continuing to use the name, under so-called common law principles.
So,
...of design. Most of the famous logos are simple, attractive, and eye-catching. Famous logos are not created overnight. It takes years of labor to make them ingrained on the mind of the people. Multi-national companies spend millions of dollars to ...
Then, once you’ve settled on a name, we highly recommend obtaining federal trademark registration as soon as possible. Help prevent confusion and conflicts by carefully monitoring the use of your trade name whenever you authorize others to bottle for you. Always grant permission to use your name in writing, and ask for copies for your records of all TTB paperwork filed by the other permittee. It would also be a good idea to ask the bottling winery to remove the trade name from its permit if you have no plans to bottle there again.
Despite
...Patents Act 1977 and its equivalent European legislation, namely Article 52(2) of the European Patent Convention ( EPC ). Both pieces of legislation outline what is excluded from patentability. The wording used in the Patents Act 1977 is different to ...
Alex Heckathorn is a principal in Compliance Service of America, a consulting firm which assists the alcoholic beverage and wine industry with regulatory compliance. His co-author, Sara Schorske, is the founder of Compliance Service of America (CSA), and has been writing on winery compliance for over 20 years. Their articles have been published in numerous wine industry magazines. http://www.csa-compliance.com














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