International Trademark protection strategy

If you wish to use your trademark abroad, it is essential to establish a strategy to ensure that it is both effectively protected and impactful in the local market.

After studying the target markets, it is necessary to consider whether using the same sign in all countries is appropriate. Would market entry be facilitated by transliteration or translation of the trademark? Does the proposed sign meet the validity requirements of the target country’s intellectual property office? Is the proposed sign available? These preliminary questions and searches are essential to ensure the secure and effective exploitation of the trademark.

Several trademark protection methods are available. Each option has advantages and disadvantages, and associated costs may vary considerably from one option to another.

international trademark protection strategy
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The European Union procedure: EU Trademarks

If you wish to protect your trademark within the European Union, you may file an EU Trademark application with the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO). This allows you to obtain unitary protection across all EU Member States through a centralized filing and examination procedure.

Benefits of EU Trademark registration

The international procedure: Madrid system

The International Trademark System, administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), allows trademark protection to be extented to multiple countries that are members of the Madrid System, based on a national trademark filing. A single international application may be filed with WIPO, designating the countries protection is sought.

However, it is important to note that each designated country has the right to individually examine and approve the application, and therefore verifications and prior art searches should be conducted for each target country.

Madrid Protocol key features

The national procedure: individual national filings

This option involves filing a trademark registration application in each country where protection is sought. It requires meeting the specific requirements of each country’s intellectual property office in terms of filing, procedures, and costs. This may be a strategic solution if you are targeting a limited number of countries.

When national filing is preferred

The priority right: strategic timing advantage

Regardless of the option chosen, it is possible, after an initial filing in France, to refine your international trademark filing strategy during the following six months.

Indeed, during this period, the applicant has a priority right, allowing the extention of trademark protection for the same goods or services aborad, by legal fiction, from the date of the French trademark filing.

Maximizing the Priority period

The six-month priority period provides valuable time to:

Comparative analysis: choosing the right strategy

CriterionEU TrademarkMadrid SystemNational Filings
Geographic Scope27 EU countries130+ countriesAny country
Cost EfficiencyHigh for EUMedium to HighVaries by country
Processing Time4-6 months12-18 monthsVaries by country
FlexibilityLimited (all-or-nothing)High (selective designation)Maximum
Best ForEU-focused businessesMulti-country expansionStrategic markets

Working with international partners

The DE BAECQUE BELLEC firm works with a network of international partners to support you in these foreign trademark protection procedures and explain the procedural specifics of different offices.

Our global network ensures:

Stephane BELLEC - DE BAECQUE BELLEC Trademark Attorney

Stéphane Bellec, Partner

Intellectual Property Attorney

Email: sbellec@debaecque-avocats.com

Tel: +33 (0) 1 53 29 90 00