An Anatomy of U.S. Firms Seeking Trademark Registration, , ,
Chapter in NBER book Measuring and Accounting for Innovation in the Twenty-First Century (2021), Carol Corrado, Jonathan Haskel, Javier Miranda, and Daniel Sichel, organizers This paper reports on the construction of a new dataset that combines data on trademark applications and registrations from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office with data on firms from the U.S. Census Bureau. The resulting dataset allows tracking of various activity related to trademark use and protection over the life-cycle of firms. Facts about firm-level trademark activity are documented, including the incidence and timing of trademark registration filings over the firm life-cycle and the connection between firm characteristics and trademark applications. The analysis indicates that trademark filing is correlated with employment and revenue growth. There appears to be strong selection into trademark filing for trademark registration based on firm size and age. Firms seeking trademark registration also have higher employment and greater revenue in the period following first filing relative to a control group. Firms with R&D and patent activity are also very likely to apply to register trademarks. This chapter is no longer available for free download, since the book has been published. To obtain a copy, you must buy the book.Order from Amazon.com
Acknowledgments and Disclosures Machine-readable bibliographic record - MARC, RIS, BibTeX This chapter first appeared as NBER working paper w25038, An Anatomy of U.S. Firms Seeking Trademark Registration, Emin M. Dinlersoz, Nathan Goldschlag, Amanda Fila, Nikolas Zolas |

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