Shonuff
Mr. Poopybutthole
- 5,538
- 791
So, the reason why this is coming up, is because a friend of mine in another city (but same industry), had a new company pop up with a like name. His name was AAA Service, the other guy's name was AAA Discount Service. Customers got confused, and as my friend had been in business for 15 years, the other company used his good name to rip people off. The new guy went around acting like he was the owner of the established company, and got people to pay him upfront for jobs. After all, people thought that he'd been around for awhile. The new guy stole about 100-150k in cash from customers (and then left town), and it ruined the reputation of my friend's business. His sales dropped 70%, and lost money for a year or two. He used to do 60-70k a month in service fees, but dropped to just 20-25k (which just covered his overhead). He had to re-brand the business that had been around for 15 years and used to have a sterling reputation, and it took three years to get back to where he used to be.
1- A trademark would have stopped this right? I know AAA is so commonplace, but for a business with a rarer name, I'm thinking it would be protected.
2- Other than paying a lawyer thousands of dollars to do this, would Legal Zoom do it? Or do you need expertise?
3- In my situation, we border two states, so I'm assuming I'd need two trademarks for each state, right?
1- A trademark would have stopped this right? I know AAA is so commonplace, but for a business with a rarer name, I'm thinking it would be protected.
2- Other than paying a lawyer thousands of dollars to do this, would Legal Zoom do it? Or do you need expertise?
3- In my situation, we border two states, so I'm assuming I'd need two trademarks for each state, right?