How Burger King Lost Its Name in Australia — Trade Mark Lessons for Growing Businesses - Ep 12 episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 25, 2026 · 8 MIN

How Burger King Lost Its Name in Australia — Trade Mark Lessons for Growing Businesses - Ep 12

from Elise Explains IPcast · host elisesteegstra

How Burger King Lost Its Name in Australia — Trade Mark Lessons for Growing Businesses What happens when a global brand expands into a new country… and discovers it doesn’t legally own its own name there? In this episode, Elise breaks down the famous Australian branding anomaly behind Burger King and Hungry Jack's, and explains why this story is more than just business trivia — it’s a powerful lesson in trade mark strategy. If you’re planning to grow your brand beyond your current market, this is essential listening. What You’ll Learn Why trade marks are territorial and don’t automatically travel with your business How filing timing can determine who legally owns a brand name The real commercial costs of rebranding in a new market Why trade mark planning should happen before expansion, not after How this case still affects branding in Australia today The Story in Brief When Burger King attempted to enter Australia in the 1970s, it discovered the name was already registered locally. Rather than abandon the expansion, franchise partner Jack Cowin launched the business under an alternative name: Hungry Jack’s. Same burgers. Same business model. Different legal identity. Decades later, Australians still don’t visit Burger King — they visit Hungry Jack’s. Why This Matters for Business Owners This case illustrates three core trade mark realities: 1. Your brand only exists legally where it’s protected Registration in one country doesn’t create rights elsewhere. 2. Delay can cost you your name In many jurisdictions, whoever files first usually wins. 3. Rebranding is expensive and disruptive Changing names affects marketing, recognition, customer trust, and growth momentum. Practical Takeaways Before expanding internationally: Identify target markets early Conduct proper clearance searches File trade marks proactively Align filings with your expansion timeline Trade marks aren’t just defensive tools — they’re infrastructure for growth. About Elise Explains IP A practical podcast helping business owners understand intellectual property in plain English — with real-world examples, legal insights, and strategies you can actually use.

How Burger King Lost Its Name in Australia — Trade Mark Lessons for Growing Businesses What happens when a global brand expands into a new country… and discovers it doesn’t legally own its own name there? In this episode, Elise breaks down the famous Australian branding anomaly behind Burger King and Hungry Jack's, and explains why this story is more than just business trivia — it’s a powerful lesson in trade mark strategy. If you’re planning to grow your brand beyond your current market, this is essential listening. What You’ll Learn Why trade marks are territorial and don’t automatically travel with your business How filing timing can determine who legally owns a brand name The real commercial costs of rebranding in a new market Why trade mark planning should happen before expansion, not after How this case still affects branding in Australia today The Story in Brief When Burger King attempted to enter Australia in the 1970s, it discovered the name was already registered locally. Rather than abandon the expansion, franchise partner Jack Cowin launched the business under an alternative name: Hungry Jack’s. Same burgers.Same business model.Different legal identity. Decades later, Australians still don’t visit Burger King — they visit Hungry Jack’s. Why This Matters for Business Owners This case illustrates three core trade mark realities: 1. Your brand only exists legally where it’s protectedRegistration in one country doesn’t create rights elsewhere. 2. Delay can cost you your nameIn many jurisdictions, whoever files first usually wins. 3. Rebranding is expensive and disruptiveChanging names affects marketing, recognition, customer trust, and growth momentum. Practical Takeaways Before expanding internationally: Identify target markets early Conduct proper clearance searches File trade marks proactively Align filings with your expansion timeline Trade marks aren’t just defensive tools — they’re infrastructure for growth. About Elise Explains IP A practical podcast helping business owners understand intellectual property in plain English — with real-world examples, legal insights, and strategies you can actually use.

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How Burger King Lost Its Name in Australia — Trade Mark Lessons for Growing Businesses - Ep 12

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This episode was published on February 25, 2026.

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How Burger King Lost Its Name in Australia — Trade Mark Lessons for Growing Businesses What happens when a global brand expands into a new country… and discovers it doesn’t legally own its own name there? In this episode, Elise breaks down the...

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