How to protect your pet business from copycats with Debbie Humphreys

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What would you do if someone copied your pet business? 

Thatโ€™s what happened to Debbie Humphreys from Redhound for Dogs, not once but TWICE.

The first was a department store who copied knitting kits sheโ€™d made for dog jumpers.

Then someone ripped off her entire product, buying her designs, and using the exact pattern.

In this episode Debbie shares what itโ€™s like to find out youโ€™ve been copied, and how to take action to protect yourself.

She talks about the emotional impact and what sheโ€™s doing to take on the copycats, campaigning to the Government to support businesses.

You can listen in on the player link below or read the key points as a blog post.

Hi Debbie can you tell me about you and your pet business?

“Iโ€™m the founder of Redhound for Dogs, a brand for Whippets making products for Whippets and Whippet owners and lovers. 

“Before joining the pet industry 12 years ago, inspired by my own shivering Whippet Bruno, I worked as a wedding dress designer.

“I started out making knitted jumpers to keep Bruno warm, and that grew into Redhound and we now have a range of t-shirts, fleeces, macs, coats and packs.”

Weโ€™re here to talk about copying in the pet industry, can you tell me about your experience? 

โ€œYes, it started back in 2014 when I decided to make kits where you could knit your dog a jumper. 

โ€œI thought I could broaden out to a craft market, not just people who want to buy ready-made items for dogs.

โ€œThey did really well and I went to London and spoke to a range of retailers. The kits were sold in Habitat, Not on the High Street and Graham and Green.

โ€œThen, I was doing my Christmas shopping in a big department store and saw a box with a knitting kit for a dog jumper that was virtually identical to ours. 

โ€œAnd I can’t really describe the feeling. It was gut wrenching. We bought one because I needed to know who was doing it. 

โ€œWe traced it back and we’d sent a kit six months before to the head office of this particular department store, so we took legal action and the kits were taken off sale.โ€

And then you had a second experience where somebody copied your patterns?

โ€œA customer of ours sent me a photograph of someone on Etsy and said, โ€˜I think this is your coat.โ€™ 

โ€œWe did some research and found the owner of the shop had bought all our patterns, in separate orders.

โ€œIt was clearly written on the patterns that the copyright was protected and they were not for commercial use.

โ€œAs we were still selling the ready-made coats, I logged it with Etsy and they took her shop down, and I received some really abusive emails from her. 

โ€œOur solicitor wrote to her, and we could prove that she had bought our patterns so she made some changes. 

โ€œWe couldnโ€™t take it any further and I decided to discontinue the ready-made version of the coat and rebranded the patterns.

โ€œWe rebranded the labels, it was so much more colourful, more of a craft product and we sold them on Etsy and Not on the High Street.

โ€œAgain, people were ordering multiple and the concern was they were going to use them for commercial gain.

โ€œIt became so difficult to police it so we pulled the product completely. Iโ€™d made it really easy for people to start making their own products and start their own business from our designs.โ€

What are the legalities around taking your pattern or your products and copying?

โ€œItโ€™s illegal but the Copyright laws in this country arenโ€™t fit for purpose for 3D items, they work for art, music and photography but itโ€™s not like that with a product. 

โ€œIf they make a certain number of changes to the design, even if they start with your product, it gets to a point where thereโ€™s enough change that it becomes their product.

โ€œSo itโ€™s really difficult to prove, and itโ€™s not policed.โ€

Can you tell me about the impact of that on you emotionally as well?

โ€œItโ€™s quite difficult to put into words because when youโ€™ve spent time, money and passion it becomes personal. 

โ€œSo when you see something thatโ€™s been heavily inspired by you and someone has ripped you off and thereโ€™s nothing you can do, itโ€™s soul-destroying.

โ€œIt can stifle your creativity as it can make you fall out of love with your own products and you feel scared of putting something new out there in the world. 

โ€œThe only way you can deal with it is to do what you do better, and know that because youโ€™re the originator you can always come up with something new – copiers canโ€™t.โ€

What you would say to someone whoโ€™s thinking of copying a product?

โ€œI would say your item will never be as good. If youโ€™re looking at something and thinking โ€˜I can do thatโ€™ you donโ€™t have a business idea. 

โ€œGo and think of an idea of your own, or invest in the skillset to do it yourself.โ€

What’s your advice for small businesses and protecting themselves?

โ€œYou can register your designs; we used a solicitor to do this or you can do it through a Government agency. 

โ€œI also made our designs deliberately complicated because they arenโ€™t as easy to just โ€˜makeโ€™ and most of our designs arenโ€™t simple shapes because theyโ€™re for Whippets. 

โ€œIf they’re making a product, do a timeline of your design, photograph your designs with the dates on them. 

โ€œLog every part of the process so you can always show that youโ€™re not copying if anyone accuses you.

โ€œAnd donโ€™t give too much away about new products until they are ready and registered just in case people are watching on social media and want to copy.โ€ 

Youโ€™re speaking to the Government but what would you say youโ€™ve learnt from the experience?

โ€œIโ€™ve learnt that you just have to plough on and do the best you can. You canโ€™t let it upset you, you have to carry on being better and stay in your bubble.

โ€œI also donโ€™t look at what other people are doing so Iโ€™m not consumed with, โ€˜thatโ€™s really similar to ours.โ€™ I just try to do better than I already am.โ€

Want to learn more about Debbie?

Find out more about Debbieโ€™s work: https://www.redhoundfordogs.com/

Follow her on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/redhoundfordogs/

Join the Redhounders Facebook Community:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/2912568292301801

Learn more about copying and protecting your business on the Anti Copying in Design Website: https://www.acid.uk.com/

Debbie also recommends the Make it British community: https://makeitbritish.co.uk/


If you found this post helpful you might like How to make sure your blog isn’t breaking the law with Catherine France, In the spotlight with Stephanie Zikmann and How to deal with criticism from people in your industry 

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