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Trademark Attorney West Plains MO

For a start-up company in West Plains, MO, it is important to register your trademark. This offers you protection against intellectual property theft and dilution of your brand. It is useful to consult with a trademark attorney first- they will guide you through the necessary steps and make the process much easier.

Calan Teller Mcconkey
520 S. Kansas City Avenue
Excelsior Springs, MO
Morris Eli Turek
314-749-4059
167 LAMP AND LANTERN VLG # 220
CHESTERFIELD, MO
Management Performance Associates
(314) 434-4227
14323 S Outer 40
Chesterfield, MO
Rainmaker Sales Support
(314) 638-0200
9905 Gravois Rd Ste C
Saint Louis, MO
Circle of Friends Child Care Center
(636) 947-6086
2559 Raymond Dr
Saint Charles, MO
Anthony Gerard Simon
ST. LOUIS 701 MARKET ST STE 1450
SAINT LOUIS, MO
Jerad G. Seurer
314-654-3814
675 MCDONNELL BLVD
HAZELWOOD, MO
Egan Group
(636) 230-3200
449 Sovereign Ct
Ballwin, MO
Waterman Research Solutions Llc
(314) 771-8300
5145 Shaw Ave
Saint Louis, MO
J P Management Lp
(314) 738-9229
4774 Park Blvd
Hazelwood, MO
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Trademark

Dear StartupNation: I’m forming a new business under a unique name. A friend said I should copyright the name by sending it to the Library of Congress in Washington, DC and in a sealed envelope to myself so there’s a record of when it was created. Will that protect me against someone using the same name?

Basically, your friend’s advice gets you zip. .”

A trademark is a crucial step to protecting a startup business name. But it differs greatly from its legal cousins, the patent and copyright. Many entrepreneurs confuse patents, trademarks and copyrights. And while there are similarities, they serve different purposes.

Trademark breakdown

  • According to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), a trademark is a word, name, symbol, device (or combination of those) used in business to indicate a source of the goods (your business) and to distinguish those goods from those sold by another business. A service mark is the same as a trademark, except that it identifies and distinguishes the source of a service rather than a product. In practice, however, the terms are often used interchangeably. The trademark blocks others from using a confusingly similar name, but doesn’t prevent anyone from making the same goods or selling the same service under a different name.

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