Why Expanding Overseas Breaks So Many Trade Marks - Ep 23

Episode Overview

Expanding your business internationally sounds like growth.

But from a trade mark perspective, it’s often where things start to unravel.

In this episode, recorded from London during the INTA Conference, Elise unpacks a common — and costly — issue: why so many businesses run into trade mark problems when they enter new markets.

The key takeaway?

Your brand might feel global… but legally, it isn’t.

What This Episode Covers

  • Why trade mark rights are territorial (and what that actually means in practice)
  • The most common assumptions business owners make about owning a brand
  • How international expansion exposes hidden IP risks
  • Real-world scenarios where businesses lose control of their brand overseas
  • Why filing a trade mark is not the same as having a strategy

Key Risks When Expanding Overseas

1. Someone Already Owns Your Brand

You may discover that your brand is already registered in another country — even if you’ve been using it for years in your home market.

In many jurisdictions, priority is based on filing date, not use.

2. You Receive a Cease & Desist

Launching into a new market without clearance can trigger enforcement action from existing rights holders.

This can lead to:

  • Forced rebranding
  • Legal costs
  • Delays to expansion

3. Your Brand Can’t Be Registered

A name that works in one country may be:

  • Descriptive in another language
  • Too similar to an existing mark
  • Restricted under local laws

This leaves you exposed without enforceable rights.

4. You Filed — But Not Strategically

Common issues include:

  • Filing too late
  • Filing in the wrong entity
  • Incorrect or narrow specifications
  • Over-reliance on the Madrid Protocol without local strategy

Why This Matters

Trade mark issues don’t stay “legal problems.”

They quickly become commercial problems, affecting:

  • Brand consistency
  • Marketing and customer trust
  • Distribution and partnerships
  • Business valuation and investment readiness

Practical Takeaways

If you’re planning to expand internationally:

✔️ Think Ahead

Consider future markets early — even if expansion is 12–24 months away.

✔️ Clear Before You Enter

Undertake trade mark searches in your target country before launching.

✔️ Prioritise Key Markets

Focus protection on where you:

  • Sell
  • Manufacture
  • Plan to grow

✔️ Get Ownership Right

Ensure the correct entity owns the IP — particularly across group structures.

✔️ Treat Trade Marks as a Business Asset

This is not just a legal step — it’s part of your growth strategy.

INTA Insight

Attending the INTA Conference in London highlights a consistent global theme:

Most trade mark disputes don’t arise because businesses act recklessly —

they arise because businesses grow… without aligning their IP strategy to that growth.

Key Concept: Territorial Rights

Trade mark protection is granted country by country.

There is no single “worldwide” trade mark.

International systems like the Madrid Protocol can streamline filings — but they do not eliminate the need for jurisdiction-specific strategy.

Next Steps

If international expansion is on your horizon, now is the time to ask:

Will your brand actually work in the markets you want to enter?

Fixing issues early is strategic.

Fixing them later is expensive.

Work With Elise

If you’d like tailored advice on protecting your brand as you scale, you can book a strategy call:

🌐 www.elisesteegstra.com

Subscribe & Share

If you found this episode helpful, share it with a business owner or advisor who is thinking about expanding internationally.

Because the earlier this is understood, the easier it is to get right.