Andrei Mincov is the \u201ctrademark guy\u201d and founder of Trademark Factory. He earned his PhD in law and worked for the biggest international law firm in Russia doing intellectual property work for the likes of Microsoft, Google, Apple, Facebook, J. K. Rowling, DreamWorks and more. When Andrei moved to Canada, he went from being a hotshot lawyer to a nobody. It wasn\u2019t until he read Robert Kiyosaki\u2019s Rich Dad, Poor Dad that he decided to start his own firm.
In this interview, Andrei teaches us about what a trademark does, and why it\u2019s better to trademark before you launch your company rather than later. He also shares the story of how he became \u201cthe trademark guy\u201d and how he challenged himself to become an entrepreneur.
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In This Interview I Ask:
1:05 - How [did] you come to be the \u201ctrademark guy\u201d in the Trademark Factory. What\u2019s your story?
6:15 - How long ago did you join the biggest law firm in Russia?
15:00 - Why are trademarks important, and why are we wrong for not thinking about this stuff?
21:23 - You actually did some research on whether or not the top brands and the world were following [the saying \u201cideas are nothing\u201d]. What did you find?
22:56 - Let\u2019s say I\u2019ve got a vision of building a lifestyle business, and it\u2019s going to be $100k a year, roughly, is there any value in me going out and trademarking it if I have no intention of going bigger?
24:33 - Does [having a trademark] raise my value if I\u2019m eventually going to sell a company? Is that going to allow me to get a bigger price for my business when I sell it?
27:42 - Are you educating people through your marketing on why they need trademarks or are you just doing traditional marketing in the traditional sense where you are making yourself known to people who are looking for a trademark?
32:46 - What is the cost [of trademarking] dependent on, or is there a flat cost for me to go out and get a trademark?
36:39 - Where can we go if we want to see some educational [trademark] cartoons?
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What is a Trademark?
A trademark is anything that allows the market to tell your stuff apart from identical or similar products or services of your competitors.
The trademark has nothing to do with protecting the product or service itself but has everything to do with the way people identify it.
The more competitive the environment, the more important the branding becomes because everyone is doing the same thing. It\u2019s so easy to copy those ideas so the only thing that will allow you to have the competitive advantage is to protect the brand.
\u201cIf you don\u2019t protect your competitive advantage, you don\u2019t have a competitive advantage.\u201d
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3 Reasons Why Protecting Your Trademark is Vital for Any Business
\u201cIf you\u2019re running a business [and] you don\u2019t think the value of the business is more than a few hundred thousand dollars, basically it\u2019s a hobby. It\u2019s not a business.\u201d
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Trademark Your Brand Before You Launch
All the big, hot startups (like Uber, Firefox, Facebook, Google, etc) filed their first trademark applications within the same month, if not many months, prior to launching. One thing that distinguishes these founders from other entrepreneurs is that they believed they could be the next big thing; so they did what potential big things do and protected their assets.
\u201cTrademarks are all about timing. You need to be the first. Just because your trademark was available yesterday, doesn\u2019t mean it\u2019ll be available today.\u201d
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Trademarking is Not a Huge Investment
The cost of trademarking is marginal is compared to the cost of filing a patent. A patent typically requires tens of thousands of dollars and years of your life.
When determining if you should trademark or not, ask yourself the following questions:
If the answer is yes to all, then you don\u2019t have a business.
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How Trademarks Affect the Sale of Your Company
Whenever someone buys a company, they do their due diligence. They check competitors to see if your business may be infringing on someone else\u2019s. They check to make sure all your logos and branding assets are protected. If everything is protected, it makes it easier for the buyer.
They\u2019re not just buying your systems, but also your customers and the time that you invested building your brand. If they can\u2019t take advantage of that, that\u2019s a problem. The brand affects the value of the company.
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Show Links:
Trademark Factory, website
Request Your Free Trademark Search, fill out the form
Trademark Educational Cartoons, website