The Strategic Imperative of Trademark Registration in the Paper and Printing Sector
In the world of publishing, stationery manufacturing, and industrial printing, your brand is the vessel of your intellectual property. Whether it is the name of a prestigious book imprint, the logo on a packet of premium writing instruments, or the identity of a specialized packaging firm, a trademark is the primary shield against the dilution of your market presence. In India, the paper and printing industry is not just a commercial sector; it is the backbone of literacy, communication, and commerce.
Trademark Registration for Paper Goods provides the legal foundation for building a lasting business legacy. In an industry where copying a layout, a font style, or a brand name is deceptively easy, the lack of a registered trademark is a grave business risk. Imagine building a reputation for high-quality academic publishing over decades, only to find a counterfeit printer using your name to sell substandard, error-filled textbooks. The damage is not just financial; it is a permanent scar on your institutional goodwill.
"Your brand is the 'signature' on every page you print. If you don't own that signature, you don't own the trust of your readers or your industrial clients."
The Trademark Act, 1999, offers a robust mechanism to protect these vital assets. For paper product manufacturers, registration grants exclusive rights that are valid Pan-India. This is particularly crucial for businesses aiming for national distribution or those supplying to large government departments and educational boards. A registered trademark is often a mandatory prerequisite for government tenders and large-scale industrial contracts, acting as a badge of authenticity and legal standing.
Beyond protection, a trademark is an intangible asset that adds significant value to your company's balance sheet. For startups in the stationery space or boutique publishing houses, a registered mark is a key factor in attracting venture capital and securing loans. It proves to investors that you have the foresight to legally secure your unique market position. In the age of digital discovery, your trademark is also the key to claiming your official domain name and social media identities, ensuring a unified and protected brand story across all platforms.
Trademark Class 16 Deep Dive: From Parchment to Packaging
The classification system in India designates Class 16 as the home for paper, cardboard, and various goods made from these materials. Understanding the granular details of this class is essential for comprehensive IP coverage.
Printed Matter & Publishing
This includes books, magazines, newsletters, periodicals, and newspapers. It also covers photographs, graphic prints, maps, and posters. For publishers, this is the most critical area of protection for their imprints and series names.
Stationery & Writing Goods
Everything on a student's or professional's desk: notebooks, pens, pencils, erasers, folders, and planners. It also covers adhesives like glue and tape for stationery purposes.
Paper Packaging & Wrappers
Cardboard boxes, paper bags, wrapping paper, and absorbent sheets for food packaging. This is vital for industrial printers catering to the FMCG and retail sectors.
Office & Educational Tools
Instructional manuals, teaching aids (except apparatus), blueprints, and office requisites like staplers and paper clips. Even playing cards and printers' type are protected here.
One common confusion is between Class 16 (Goods) and Class 40 (Services). While Class 16 covers the **products** of printing, the **act of printing** for third parties is a service classified under Class 40. At IPR Karo, we handle this complexity with a dual class strategy when necessary, ensuring that your manufacturing and service aspects are both legally bulletproof.
The scope of Class 16 also reaches into artist materials. Items like paintbrushes, drawing pads, and canvas for painting are secured under this classification. For craft brands and art supply manufacturers, this is the definitive class for their brand identity. In the modern retail environment, where stationery brands often expand into lifestyle products, having a clean Class 16 registration is the mandatory first step before expanding into other categories like electronics (Class 9) or home decor.
Publishing Imprints: Protecting the Identity of Ideas
In the publishing world, the 'Imprint' is the brand. While individual book titles are rarely trademarked (unless part of a mega-franchise), the name of the publisher or a specific line of books must be registered. This protects the 'Curated Brand' that readers trust for high-quality literary, academic, or professional content.
For independent authors who are self-publishing, creating and trademarking a small press imprint is the first step toward professionalizing their work. It provides a level of legitimacy and allows the author to build a cohesive brand identity that spans across multiple titles. In an era of online marketplaces, a registered trademark is also your best defense against 'scraping' and unauthorized mirroring of your catalogs on digital platforms.
The Case for Imprint IP
"A book's content is protected by Copyright, but its commercial identity is anchored by Trademark. Without the imprint trademark, your copyright has no face in the marketplace."
Stationery Branding: Lessons from Global and Local Giants
The Indian stationery market is a mix of heritage brands and innovative newcomers. Case law in India, such as the famous *Hindustan Pencils vs. India Stationery Products* case, has reinforced the strength of trademarks in this sector. The "Nataraj" pencil brand successfully defended its identity, proving that even a descriptive or cultural name, when used for decades, can achieve the status of a 'Well-Known Mark' with elevated protection.
For a new brand in the stationery space, the goal is to create a 'Distinctive' mark. We advise our clients to avoid generic terms like "Super Soft" or "Premium Paper" as primary trademarks, as they are often rejected for being descriptive. Instead, we focus on unique names or logos that can grow into iconic identities. Our clearance search process is specifically designed to look for phonetic matches—ensuring that your brand doesn't sound too similar to any existing market leader, avoiding potential opposition during the publication phase.
Modern stationery is also about 'Trade Dress'—the distinctive look and feel of a product's packaging or its unique color scheme. Companies like Camlin or Faber-Castell have created visual identities so strong that a customer can recognize their products from a distance. While the Trademark Act primarily focuses on words and logos, the visual identity of your paper products can also be protected, providing an extra layer of defense against 'passing off' by unscrupulous competitors.
The Professional Route to Brand Ownership
Phase 1: Intellectual Property Audit & Search
Most businesses fail because they skip the audit. We perform an exhaustive search of the IP India Public Search database, looking for identical, similar, or phonetically confusing marks in Class 16. We also check for global conflicts if you intend to export. This 'Strategic Scan' ensures your application has the highest probability of clearing the examination stage without objection.
Phase 2: Drafting & Filing Form TM-A
Precision is key. We draft your 'Description of Goods' to be both broad enough for future expansion and specific enough to clear the registry. Whether you are a book publisher or a cardboard manufacturer, we ensure every nuance of your production is captured. Immediately after filing, you receive your official TM number and the right to use the ™ symbol.
Phase 3: Examination & Journal Publication
The Registrar examines the mark for distinctiveness. If an examination report is issued with objections, our team drafts a legally robust response based on precedents. Once cleared, the mark is published in the Trademark Journal. After the 4-month opposition window closes successfully, your brand is officially registered, and you get the ® certificate.
Checklist: Building Your Legal Portfolio
Transparency and preparedness reduce the turnaround time for your application. Here is what we need to get started:
For Entrepreneurs & Startups
- Aadhaar and PAN Card of the applicant.
- MSME / Udyam Certificate (To avail 50% government fee rebate).
- A clear high-resolution copy of your brand logo.
- Signed Authorization (Form TM-48).
For Established Printing Units/Publishers
- Certificate of Incorporation or Partnership Deed.
- GST Registration Certificate.
- Board Resolution authorizing the signatory.
- User Affidavit (In case of a 'Proposed to be Used' claim).
Stopping the Invisible Thieves: Anti-Counterfeiting in Paper & Printing
The paper industry is plagued by high-volume, low-margin counterfeiting. From fake branded notebooks to pirated versions of popular manuals, the lack of quality control in counterfeit goods creates a massive safety and reputation risk. In many cases, these fake goods are sold through unorganized retail or small digital shops that are hard to track.
A registered trademark is your most powerful weapon in this battle. It allows you to initiate **Criminal Action and Police Raids** against counterfeit units. Under the Trademark Act, if you have prime facie proof of infringement, the police can seize infringing goods and arrest perpetrators without a warrant. This provides a swift and decisive tool to purge the market of fake versions of your brand.
We also facilitate **Customs Recordation**. For paper companies with global supply chains, registering your mark with the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) allows customs officers at ports to intercept and seize imported counterfeit goods. This creates a virtual wall around the Indian market, ensuring only genuine products enter your distribution channels. Combine this with physical security features like holograms or serial numbers, and you have a comprehensive, multi-layered brand defense strategy.
Eco-Friendly Branding: The IP of Sustainable Paper
The current shift toward sustainability has created a boom in the market for recycled paper, biodegradable packaging, and FSC-certified products. Branding in this space is critical; consumers are willing to pay a premium for verified green products. If you have developed a unique, eco-friendly manufacturing process, while a patent might protect the technology, a trademark protects the 'Green Promise' of your brand.
Securing a trademark for names like "EcoLeaf" or "PureCycle" (subject to search availability) allows you to own a piece of the growing environmental consciousness of the Indian consumer. It prevents greenwashing by competitors who might try to confuse buyers with similar sounding but non-certified products. A solid Class 16 registration for your sustainable paper line is the key to building a high-value, future-ready brand that resonates with the modern, ethical consumer.
Writing Your Story Globally: The Madrid Protocol
Indian paper goods, specifically artisanal paper and educational stationery, have a massive market in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Africa. If you intend to export, protecting your brand only in India is not enough. The **Madrid Protocol** offers a streamlined way to protect your brand in over 120 member countries through a single international application filed in India.
This is significantly more cost-effective than hiring individual lawyers in every country. A global trademark portfolio is also a massive advantage when negotiating with international distributors or setting up franchises in foreign markets. It provides the legal certainty that your brand identity is secure, no matter where your products are sold.
The Legal Landscape of Printing Services: Class 16 vs. Class 40
A recurring point of confusion for entrepreneurs in the printing industry is the distinction between goods and services. If you produce your own line of notebooks, you are in Class 16. If you print custom business cards for other companies, you are providing a service, which falls under Class 40. For a modern printing unit, a dual-class registration is often the most strategic move.
This ensuring that both your own brand of paper products and your identity as a service provider are protected. We perform a 'Gap Analysis' for our clients to identify these overlapping needs. By securing both classes, you prevent a scenario where a competitor could use your name for printing services even while you own the trademark for paper goods, avoiding a massive legal loophole that could damage your business expansion plans.
Goods Branding (Class 16)
Protects your branded notebooks, packaging materials, and printed publications as finished products in the market.
Service Branding (Class 40)
Protects your identity as a specialized printer, engraver, or bookbinder offering custom work for third parties.
Intellectual Property Rights and the Future of Small Presses
The rise of digital technology has democratized the world of publishing. Small presses and self-publishing authors now have global reach. However, this ease of access also means ease of infringement. For a small press, the imprint is its most valuable asset—it represents the quality of the selected works and the vision of the editor.
A registered trademark in Class 16 allows a small press to build a distinct 'Catalog Identity.' It ensures that their brand isn't buried under the noise of millions of generic publications online. More importantly, it facilitates licensing deals with foreign publishers, where the trademark serves as the legal anchor for international rights management. We specialize in helping small publishers build these 'Micro-National' brands by securing their IP with the same precision used by global publishing giants.
Trademarking Instructional and Educational Material
In the competitive landscape of Indian coaching institutes and educational content providers, the 'Study Material' is often a major differentiator. While the content is copyrighted, the brand under which it is sold—the workbook name, the series title, or the institute's imprint—must be a trademarked asset.
This registration prevents other institutes from selling 'Pirated' versions of your material or creating 'Lookalike' workbooks that can confuse students into believing they are using your official materials. By securing your Class 16 rights, you own the visual and commercial identity of your educational products, ensuring that your intellectual labor translates into commercial success and institutional prestige.
The Role of IPR in Modern Stationery Retail
Stationery has evolved into a lifestyle segment. Concept stores and online stationery boutiques are thriving. In this high-aesthetic market, branding is everything. A trademark registration allows these retailers to create proprietary lines of planners, journals, and desk accessories that command premium prices.
Our services for stationery retailers include not just trademark filing, but also strategic advice on 'Portfolio Protection.' This involves identifying which sub-brands or collections should have their own trademarks and which fall under the umbrella of the main house brand. This structured approach ensures that every aspect of the retailer's aesthetic and commercial identity is fully protected, both in physical stores and across digital marketplaces.
Intellectual Property in Academic Publishing: The Battle for Credibility
In the sphere of academic and scientific publishing, a brand is a marker of peer-review integrity and scholarly rigor. When a researcher submits a paper to a journal, they are looking for a brand that is recognized by global indexing services. Trademarking the name of an academic journal is not just about commercial protection; it is about maintaining the 'Chain of Trust' in the scientific community.
For Indian academic publishers aiming to compete with global giants, building a strong, registered brand is essential. It ensures that your journal's identity is not hijacked by predatory publishers who often use similar-sounding names to deceive researchers. This registration also forms a crucial part of your 'Imprint Strategy,' allowing you to house multiple journals under a single, trusted umbrella brand that is legally secure and ownable.
The branding of study guides and handbooks also falls under this category. In India, where millions of students prepare for competitive exams every year, the coaching material market is a multi-billion dollar industry. A registered trademark prevents other institutes from selling 'Pirated' or 'Mirror' versions of your curriculum. It ensures that the students get the original, high-quality material they paid for, while protecting your institute's educational legacy from the dark market of unregulated coaching centers.
The Art of Bookbinding: Trademarking Traditional Craftsmanship
Bookbinding is often seen as a dying art, but in the luxury segment, it is witnessing a massive resurgence. Hand-bound journals, leather-embossed diaries, and archival-quality preservation services are high-value niches. For a master bookbinder, their name is their most valuable asset.
Trademarking your bookbinding brand in Class 16 ensures that your craftsmanship is recognized and protected from industrial-scale imitators. It allows you to build a 'Boutique Identity' that can be licensed to high-end stationery stores and luxury gift retailers. In a market where 'Handmade' and 'Artisanal' are significant selling points, a registered trademark is the legal proof of your brand's unique origin and quality standards.
This protection also extends to the specific materials used in binding. If you have developed a unique type of paper ribbon or a specific style of bookbinding apparatus (used in an office or studio setting), protecting the brand under which these are sold ensures that your innovations are commercialized exclusively by you. It turns a traditional skill into a modern, scalable, and legally protected business model.
Printers' Type and Printing Blocks: A Digital Resurgence
It might seem archaic, but 'Printers' type' and 'Printing blocks' are explicitly mentioned in the Class 16 classification. In the modern era, this has evolved into the world of 'Letterpress Printing' and 'Custom Engraving.' This is a high-end niche for weddings, corporate events, and limited-edition art prints.
Registering a trademark for your custom font foundry or your letterpress studio is a strategic move. While the font design itself is protected by copyright, the brand name under which you offer these specialized printing goods is protected by trademark. This prevents other digital foundries from using your name to sell similar-looking typefaces, ensuring that your unique aesthetic remains exclusive to your brand.
As industrial printing moves toward 3D technologies, the role of 'Printing blocks' is also evolving. While 3D printers themselves are in Class 7, the specialized paper-based structural components used in some forms of rapid prototyping can fall under Class 16. Protecting these brands now ensures that you own the identity of the next generation of printing technologies as they enter the mainstream market.
Personalized Stationery: The New Frontier of Consumer Branding
The rise of social media and the 'Aesthetic' movement has made personalized stationery a massive consumer trend. Custom planners, monogrammed note-cards, and themed stickers are high-growth areas for D2C (Direct-to-Consumer) brands. In this market, the 'Brand Personality' is the primary driver of sales.
Trademark registration allows these D2C stationery brands to protect their name across various digital and physical touchpoints. It ensures that when a customer searches for your brand on Instagram or Amazon, they find your official store and not a 'Drop-shipping' clone using your brand name. This digital brand protection is as important as the physical protection of the goods themselves, as it maintains the integrity of your customer relationship and your price positioning.
Furthermore, for brands that collaborate with artists and illustrators for their stationery lines, the trademark is the legal container for these partnerships. It allows for clear licensing agreements where the artist's work is protected by copyright, while the stationery brand's commercial identity is secured by trademark. This dual-layered IP strategy is what allows these brands to create high-value, limited-edition collections that stand out in the crowded online marketplace.
Branding for Research Journals and Scientific Papers
In the world of high-level research, the journal's brand is its currency. When we talk about Trademark Class 16, we often overlook the 'Scientific Papers' and 'Technical Research Journals' that are the bedrock of human knowledge. Registering a brand for a scientific publication series provides a level of legal authority that is respected by universities and research institutes globally.
This registration acts as a deterrent against the 'Re-publishing' of your research under different brand names, which is a common form of intellectual property theft in the academic world. While the findings themselves are public or copyrighted, the 'Authority Brand' under which they are disseminated is yours to own. This brand becomes a signal of quality, ensuring that your research group or publishing house remains the definitive source for information in your specific field of study.
As we move toward 'Open Access' models, the journal's brand identity becomes even more critical. In a world where content is free, the brand becomes the primary way to monetize through APCs (Article Processing Charges) and high-value institutional partnerships. A registered trademark is the legal foundation for these modern, digital-first scientific publishing models.
Intellectual Property for Photographic Prints and Graphic Art Reproductions
Class 16 also covers 'Photographs' and 'Photographic prints.' For professional photographers and digital artists, the brand under which they sell their physical prints is a critical business asset. Trademarking your photography brand ensures that your prints are correctly identified as authentic works from your studio.
This is particularly relevant for photographers who sell their work in galleries or through specialized online platforms. A registered trademark prevents 'Unauthorized Print-on-Demand' services from using your name to sell copies of your work. It provides you with the legal standing to take down infringing listings and ensures that the buyers are getting genuine, high-quality reproductions that carry your professional signature and brand promise.
The same logic applies to 'Graphic Art Reproductions' and 'Pictures.' In an era where AI-generated art is flooding the market, the brand of the human artist becomes a premium signal. By registering your brand in Class 16, you are not just protecting a name; you are protecting the human craftsmanship and the artistic vision that your customers values. This brand acts as a 'Certificate of Authenticity' in physical form, ensuring your work remains a collectible and high-value asset.
The Legal Nuances of Paper Ribbons and Bows Branding
It might seem like a minor detail, but 'Paper ribbons' and 'Bows' are high-volume products in the gifting and event decoration industry. For manufacturers specializing in high-end, sustainable, or luxury gift-wrapping accessories, the brand name is the key to premium pricing.
Trademarking your ribbon brand in Class 16 ensures that your unique designs and brand identity are not cloned by mass-market manufacturers. It allows you to build a cohesive brand story around 'The Art of Gifting,' where every accessory—from the paper to the bow—standardly carries your brand's mark of quality. This creates a powerful 'Brand Ecosystem' that is hard for competitors to replicate, as it is anchored by multiple, legally protected identities.
Garbage Bags and Industrial Paper: The Branding of Commodities
Class 16 also includes 'Garbage bags of paper or of plastics.' In the industrial cleaning and hospitality sectors, these are high-volume commodity goods. However, for a manufacturer, branding these items is a way to move away from low-margin competition and build institutional loyalty.
A registered trademark for your industrial paper line ensures that when a large hospital or hotel chain places a repeat order, they ask for your brand by name. This 'Institutional Locked-in' is only possible if you own a clear and legally protected identity. It prevents 'Lookalike' commodity suppliers from undercutting your price by passing off their lower-quality plastics or paper as yours, ensuring your industrial business remains profitable and stable.
The branding of 'Disposable Paper Goods'—like paper towels and toilet paper—follows the same logic. In the post-pandemic era, consumers are highly sensitive to hygiene brands. A registered trademark is a signal of sterilization and safety standards. By securing your brand in Class 16, you are not just selling a disposables; you are selling peace of mind, a commodity that is increasingly valuable in the modern global economy.
Expert Counsel: FAQ on Class 16 Trademarks
Q.What is Trademark Class 16 in India?
Trademark Class 16 covers paper, cardboard, and goods made from these materials. It also includes printed matter, stationery, office requisites (except furniture), and instructional materials.
Q.Do I need a trademark for each book I publish?
Generally, no. You trademark the name of the publishing house or a specific book 'series' or 'imprint' rather than individual book titles, unless the title itself is a massive brand like Harry Potter.
Q.Can I protect a unique stationery item design under Class 16?
Class 16 protects the brand name and logo. For a unique functional design of a pen or stapler, you might need a Design Patent or a Utility Patent.
Q.Does Class 16 cover digital e-books?
No, digital publications and downloadable software usually fall under Class 9. Class 16 is strictly for physical paper and printed counterparts.
Q.Is there a government fee rebate for paper startups?
Yes, if you have an MSME/Udyam certificate or are a recognized Startup, you get a 50 percent rebate on the government filing fee, paying 4500 instead of 9000 per class.
Q.How long is a Class 16 trademark valid?
Like all Indian trademarks, it is valid for 10 years and can be renewed indefinitely every decade.
Q.Can I trademark a specific font or typeface?
While 'Printers' type' is mentioned in Class 16, individual font designs are often protected under copyright or design laws rather than as a primary trademark.
Q.Does Class 16 include cardboard packaging?
Yes, paper bags, cardboard boxes, and various paper-based packaging materials are covered under Class 16.
Q.What happens if someone copies my stationery brand logo?
With a registered trademark, you can file a suit for infringement, seek an injunction to stop their sales, and claim damages for loss of reputation and business.
Q.How do I add my mark to the Trademark Journal?
Once your application passes the examination stage, the Registrar automatically publishes it in the weekly Trademark Journal for a 4-month opposition window.
Technical Specifics of Class 16 Registration: Avoiding The Registry's Objections
One of the most frequent reasons for a Class 16 application to be stalled is 'Vagueness of Goods.' The Trademark Registry in India is increasingly strict about the classification as per the Nice Classification system. If an applicant simply writes "All goods in Class 16," an objection is almost guaranteed.
We avoid this by providing a highly specific and enumerated list of goods. For instance, if our client is a producer of premium tissue paper, we don't just write "Paper Goods." We specify "Facial Tissues of Paper, Paper Hand-towels, and disposable paper napkins for household use." This level of precision eliminates the ambiguity that often leads to time-consuming and expensive examinations. Our legal team drafts these specifications to be 'Objection-Proof,' ensuring a smoother and faster journey toward registration.
Furthermore, for marks that have a certain descriptive flavor, we rely on the principle of 'Acquired Distinctiveness.' If you have been using a name that might have been considered common but has now become synonymous with your high-quality paper goods through years of use, we compile the necessary evidence—sales figures, advertising spend, and market reputation—to prove that the mark has gained a secondary meaning. This allows us to secure brands that might otherwise be rejected by the Registry.
Historic Context: The Evolution of Paper Industry IP in India
The registration of trademarks in the paper and printing sector in India dates back to the early 20th century. Historic publishing houses like the Oxford University Press or local giants like S. Chand have long recognized the importance of protecting their identity. Historically, the focus was on preventing the 'Piracy' of literary works. However, in the post-independence era, as industrial manufacturing of paper and stationery blossomed, the focus shifted to brand parity and quality assurance.
Today, India is a global hub for cost-effective, high-quality printing. As Indian firms move from being 'Contract Printers' to becoming 'Global Brands,' the role of IP has never been more critical. The shift from a colonial-era legal mindset to a modern, digitally-integrated IP regime has empowered small manufacturers to challenge large incumbents. This democratization of the brand space, backed by the Trademarks Act, 1999, is what allows a startup in a Tier-2 city to build a brand that is as legally secure as that of a multinational conglomerate.
Branding in the Packaging Industry: The B2B Trademark Advantage
For companies in the paper packaging and cardboard industries, branding is often seen as a B2B (Business-to-Business) activity. However, in the high-stakes supply chain environment, your brand name on a cardboard box is a guarantee of structural integrity and load-bearing capacity. If a competitor uses your brand on a lower-grade box that fails during transit, causing damage to the client's goods, the liability can fall on you if the brand isn't correctly protected.
A registered trademark for your packaging brand allows you to enforce quality standards and protects you from the legal and reputational fallout of counterfeit failures. It also helps in building long-term loyalty with corporate clients who value the safety and reliability associated with a recognized and legally protected brand. In the B2B world, a trademark is more than a logo; it is a professional certification of excellence in manufacturing.
Managing IP Portfolios in Large Printing Groups
Large corporations in the paper sector often operate through multiple subsidiaries and have a vast portfolio of brand extensions. Without a centralized IP management strategy, managing renewals, monitoring for infringements, and handling brand updates can become a bureaucratic nightmare.
We provide **Institutional IP Consulting** for large groups, ensuring that every brand within the group is correctly registered and its value is maximized. This includes audit services to identify unused marks that can be divested or revitalized, and a structured monitoring system that flags any emerging threats to the group's market position. By treating IP as a strategic corporate function rather than a mere legal formality, we help these organizations optimize their intellectual capital and maintain their leadership in the competitive paper and printing market.
The Valuation Multiplier
"In the modern economy, companies are valued not on their machines, but on their brands. A registered Class 16 trademark is the legal container for that value, turning your manufacturing capability into a marketable asset."
What Industry Leaders Think About Our Services
"The guidance on Class 16 classification was instrumental for our boutique stationery brand. We secured our logo in record time."
Vikram S.
Proprietor, Heritage Prints
"Protecting our textbook series was complex. IPR Karo handled the multi-class filing perfectly. Highly satisfied with their digital process."
Anjali Gupta
Director, EduQuest Publications
"For our recycled paper packaging business, branding was everything. IPR Karo helped us navigate the registry's objections smoothly."
Rahul Mehta
MD, EcoPack Solutions