As a creative professional, protecting your intellectual property is key to staying successful. So when someone infringes your copyright, what do you do? Sure, your immediate instinct may be to fight back. There’s always a little bit of ego involved… after all, someone just ripped off your work! But as I often tell clients, if someone is already using your work, you might as well get paid for it. Negotiating with your infringer could be a more fruitful avenue. Here’s why.
It’s unfortunate to say that our current judicial system in the U.S. is not really designed for the non-rich. Lawsuits are expensive and time consuming, and more than that, they can take up an awful lot of emotional real estate in your life. Copyright infringement claims can often drag on for months (federal courts are notoriously over-scheduled). On the other hand, negotiating directly with your infringer can resolve the situation quickly and privately. You can circumvent court fees, discovery costs, and time spent in front of a judge in a fraction of the time and cost. Recently, a client asked me to represent his business in a negotiation between them and a competing business that infringed his work. That negotiation took four weeks, with the bulk of that time spent drafting and revising a settlement agreement (and it was over a holiday weekend to boot).
Of course you want to get paid. Financial redress is usually the goal when someone infringes your work, but negotiating with your infringer can also open the door to other valuable outcomes such as credit, promotion, and exposure. While I rarely - if ever - counsel clients to take work just for the recognition, there’s no denying that it can still be a valuable by-product of a negotiated deal, especially if your infringer has a large platform or following. If someone has more leverage in the marketplace than you, there’s some value to using that leverage to your advantage. Negotiating could be the trick to get you there.