John Wood | Wood Patent Law
John Wood is the founder of Wood Patent Law, a Johnson City-based law firm dedicated to helping founders protect their IP, file for trademarks and patents, and defend their brand.
Summary of the Interview with Time Stamps ⬇️
Meet John Wood (0:00 – 2:34)
John Wood, founder of Wood Patent Law, introduces his firm which specializes in protecting, defending, and asserting patents and trademarks (0:05 – 0:16). He then shares the firm’s organic origin story, which began after his role at a Silicon Valley tech company ended. While taking time to work on his own technology, he was repeatedly asked by former colleagues for intellectual property (IP) legal help. After initially declining, he eventually took on the work, and his firm grew organically from those referrals, guided by his informal motto: “do good work and don’t be an asshole and things won’t go backwards” (1:48 – 2:30).
The Four Pillars of Intellectual Property (2:34 – 5:27)
Patents: These protect functional improvements and innovations, giving the inventor the right to exclude others from making or using their invention (2:38)Trademarks: These protect brands and logos. Uniquely, they are primarily a consumer protection mechanism, designed to prevent confusion in the marketplace and ensure consumers can trust the quality associated with a brand they recognize (2:42, 3:30).Copyrights: These protect creative expressions, such as books, movies, music, and photographs (2:46).Trade Secrets: This category protects any confidential information that provides a commercial advantage, such as customer lists, pricing info, or proprietary recipes. Wood highlights the Coca-Cola recipe as a prime example of a highly valuable trade secret that cannot be reverse-engineered (2:49, 4:45)
Failing to secure assignments: Not having clear, written agreements that transfer IP ownership from individual founders to the company (9:09)Failing to file in time: You “can’t go back in time and file a patent application” (9:22). He strongly recommends using aprovisional patent application as a “bookmark in time” for an invention, which secures a filing date and allows the inventor to claim “patent pending” status (6:12). For branding, he advises using an“intent to use” trademark application before heavily investing in a brand, as this starts the examination process early and helps avoid costly conflicts (10:05