World IP Day: IP and Sports — Ready, Set, Innovate! - Ep 21
Episode Summary
What do the Olympics, Nike, athlete sponsorships, and sports technology all have in common?
They’re powered by intellectual property.
In this World IP Day special, we unpack this year’s theme — “IP and Sports: Ready, Set, Innovate!” — and explore how sport provides one of the clearest real-world examples of how IP creates value, protects brands, and drives revenue.
This episode breaks down how IP operates behind the scenes in sport — and, more importantly, what business owners can learn from it.
Because whether you’re building a brand, launching a product, or scaling a business, the same principles apply.
What You’ll Learn
- Why sport is fundamentally a commercial IP ecosystem
- How trade marks, copyright, and patents operate in the sports industry
- The role of branding and emotional connection in driving value
- How athletes themselves function as IP assets
- What ambush marketing is — and why it matters
- The risks of not properly owning or controlling your IP
- Practical steps to better protect and leverage your business assets
Key Insights
1. Sport is built on IP — not just performance
Behind every team, event, and broadcast is a framework of trade marks, copyright, and licensing rights that make commercialisation possible.
2. Brand drives revenue
Merchandise, sponsorships, and media rights only work because ownership is clear and enforceable.
3. Innovation creates new value
From wearable tech to performance data, sport continues to generate IP that becomes new revenue streams.
4. Athletes are brands
Names, images, and reputations are commercial assets that need to be carefully managed and protected.
5. Protection requires action
Major sporting bodies actively enforce their rights — because unmanaged IP quickly loses value.
Common Mistakes (Beyond Sport)
- Not registering trade marks early
- Holding IP in the wrong entity or individual name
- Failing to document ownership between founders or collaborators
- Allowing inconsistent brand use across marketing and partnerships
- Treating IP as a legal formality instead of a business asset
Practical Takeaways
- Audit your IP: What do you actually own?
- Register key assets early: Especially your brand
- Clarify ownership: Between founders, entities, and contractors
- Control usage: Put clear agreements in place
- Think commercially: How could your IP generate revenue?
Reality Check
If your brand, product, or content disappeared tomorrow:
- Could you prove ownership?
- Could you stop someone else using it?
- Or would you be relying on assumptions?
About World IP Day
World Intellectual Property Day is celebrated annually on 26 April and highlights the role IP plays in encouraging innovation and creativity.
The 2026 theme:
“IP and Sports: Ready, Set, Innovate!”
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