Texas_Signmaker
Very Active Signmaker
Only thing I would see of real value is the business phone number and website / Google listing. Offer some $ to take those and forward it to her current business.
The woman may be misunderstanding or misusing the context of logo(s). Logos may be somewhat minor elements of the sign shop’s mechanical art / design files. Those files are assets and property of the shop which could have significant value to a buyer and save the buyer the expense of re-creating those assets going forward.The lady told her that she's mostly paying for the copyright of the logos, not the equipment.
Once again, you make me smile with your..... er, whatever.So your telling me that every logo this guy designed he actually spent the time and money to copyright? Am I missing something here?
I think the best and most cost-effective bet for your friend is to print up some banners and/or send out a business mailing around town, advertising to the effect that there's only one place now for all of your printing needs. Don't forget the address and phone number.I think what happened is the man passed away, my friend inquired mostly about the vinyl printer and then the lady told her she didn't want to part anything out and that she would have a meeting with her after she got things settled.
I'm guessing the lady thinks she has leverage over this sale by saying everything is copyrighted, to "force" my friend into buying everything since she's the only competition in town. The lady probably knows everyone will start going to my friend. If my friend was stupid, which she's not, she might be scared into thinking either she has to buy all these copyrights or she has to turn all this business away.
One more facet to this is that the business was connected to the house so there's no real-estate to sell. I think she would be better off trying to part it all out on EBay. Can't blame her for trying to get a mint for it I guess!
Gino said:What many of you don't realize is the parameters have changed somewhat. The creation of a logo, brand or combination of such can be considered copyrighted, just by the mere thought of it. Laying out of words or graphics does not constitute a copyrighted piece of property, for the creator or the end user. Again, if these files were treated properly, the customer already owns the rights and the sign guy was already compensated for them. If not, now there is no real proof one way or the other. It would be a very grey area in the law. Besides, these copyrights are are only good for about 70 years.
binki said:IMO the customer list with the artwork is the most valuable part, nothing else.
Go re-read what Brad just wrote. Nothing gets murky.Technically any of this stuff is supposed to be handled by contract. For instance, anyone doing freelance illustration or graphics work needs to get all the details in writing as well as a purchase order. Otherwise it's just he-said/she-said nonsense that doesn't hold up in court.
Any artwork including digital artwork is technically protected by copyright from the moment of its creation. But things get very murky very fast when dealing with logos and "logos" of local small businesses. Lots of assuming takes place in such transactions as to who owns the artwork, the person who created it or the guy who paid for one banner on which the logo was displayed.
Most sign makers blow-off these issues as not being worth the bother. Even if a copyright was clearly violated it might not be worth the expense of going to court. You might create some original artwork in a building sign design and the client shops your sketches around to rival sign companies. Then the client goes with a rival who reproduces your design and you don't get paid anything. The situation is clearly illegal, but how much is it worth to go to court? The legal expenses outweigh what little you could get in damages. Some of the bottom-feeder sign companies rip off designs with this strategy in mind.
All a legit sign company can do is take steps to cover its backside when creating artwork. Bill up front for any design work, that way it is separate from the sign project. Some sign companies bill clients for each sketch and revision they draw up. Do things to "ruin" any client sketches so rivals can't harvest any vector art from the PDFs (rasterize the content, pollute them with watermarks or other visual texture trash, even distort them slightly out of scale). Limit the amount of details in the sketches so rivals have to do their own friggin' surveys.
In the case of the widow of the sign shop owner, the pile of intellectual property she has is probably worthless. How old are these files? How much of the artwork is up to date? I have art files dating back to the early 1990's, but hardly any of the logo files going back that far are in use anymore. Other details may be valuable, not the outdated logos.
Then there may be technical issues with the art files. What software was being used? And on what kind of computer? For all we know the dead sign guy might have been using an umpteen year old PC running WinXP and outdated or defunct software. Maybe a bunch of the art files are dependent on that. Heck, even the font files the guy had might be of little value if they were proprietary to a dead piece of software or outdated in the case of Type 1 fonts.
If the widow was smart she would unload that gear for whatever she can get for it now. Otherwise she's going to have people hauling it out to the curbside for bulk garbage pick-up day a short time from now.
Even that list might be worthless. The guy who cultivated that list is dead. Customers of a local sign company aren't interested in the brand name of that company. They're more interested in the relationships they had with the people who worked there. The people doing the work are what matter. Not a company name.
Two of my co-workers were partners in another sign company and had a falling out with their former partner. Then they came to work at our company. Quite a few of their customers followed them over here.
Notarealsignguy said:Go re-read what Brad just wrote. Nothing gets murky.
If she bought the rights to use things like sports logos, I'm pretty sure that she doesn't have the rights to sell those to anyone else.Ya know, y'all are getting way ahead of yourselves. Nowhere does anything indicate this person did any huge type signs, so I doubt there is much need to discuss welders, buckets or crane trucks or anything much above the inkjet plotters mentioned, but on the other hand, nowhere was it mentioned if the logos and files were bought by his company for sports teams, disney applications and all kindsa other things. He could easily have spent a small fortune over the years and now it's hers to sell. Whether she was ill informed or just guessing, She's entitled to whatever she wants.
There was a woman on here a few years back who came here for help to sell her husband's equipment, tools and whatnot. Her husband was a member here and they fell on bad times when he took seriously ill. but she came here on his membership and tried to find things out and you people railroaded her outta town so fast, I'll bet her head is still spinning. Y'all NEVER put the shoe on the other foot, do ya ?? Y'all know how devious and bad these people are, if they're not a member. You should ALL be ashamed of yourselves. Your insight on nothingness doesn't help the OP or the person she's trying to help and it certainly doesn't help the widow. But....... ya'll know the rules enough to muddy the waters and ruin it for others. Pathetic buncha losers.
Yes. More than just files, you are buying a customer list. If you're willing to hustle, you'd have a leg up moving those customers over to you if they know you have their logo and can produce the same things they have been buying from the other company. The general public doesn't know or need to know that recreating things is not that difficult to do, they generally assume that it is. So there is some added value with that, probably not $150k but more than 20 bucks.If we print a logo for a company, the company owns the rights - whether trademark or copyright, I couldn't say. That's up to the company and they own it.
However, if we took their logo and vectorized it so it prints clearly in large format, then we own the vectorized image, unless the company paid us to have it vectorized or if they want to pay us for the artwork. We're not just going to give it to our competitors if a customer wants to go elsewhere, but they can pay us for it. Or create their own files at their own expense or the expense of the customer.
So, the artwork this company holds in its files for its customers isn't their's to use, but it's not for another sign shop to use unless that shop wants to pay for it.
In other words, we don't have the rights to plaster our customer, "Bob's Sandwiches" on our cars, but the files we have that read "Bob's Sandwiches" are ours and may have value. Especially if we were to sell our business and introduce the new owner to our customers and suggest they give them their business. Because we/the new owner has the customer's artwork, set up and often refined, as they like it to appear on their vehicles, buildings and such.
Whadja doin sneakin into my office.
Whadja doin sneakin into my office.
And where'dya find the chair?
Damn things been missing since the dolphins showed their passports
For instance, why does he finish all of the redbull, but only half finishes the lemonade...
that's not lemonade is it?