Can Your Competitor Buy Your Brand Name on Google?
Imagine spending years building a trusted brand.
Then a customer searches for your company on Google and lands on your competitor’s website instead.
That question sat at the heart of a decade-long legal battle between Hindware and Google.
In a major ruling, the Delhi High Court has ordered Google to stop allowing advertisers to bid on specific Hindware trademarks and awarded Hindware ₹30 lakh in damages.
This decision could reshape how search advertising works for brands across India.
Quick Summary
The Court Ruled That:
- Google cannot allow advertisers to bid on certain Hindware trademarked keywords.
- Google gained an unfair commercial advantage by monetizing trademarked terms.
- Hindware was awarded ₹30 lakh in damages.
- The judgment may influence future trademark disputes involving digital advertising.
How the Dispute Started
Back in 2013, Hindware discovered that competitors, including Grohe India and Cera Sanitaryware, had purchased the keyword “Hindware” through Google Ads.
As a result, users searching for Hindware products were shown sponsored advertisements from competing brands.
A customer looking for Hindware could potentially click on a competitor’s website before reaching Hindware’s own site.
Hindware argued that this practice misled consumers and unfairly benefited competitors.
How Google Ads Actually Works
Example
User searches:
Hindware
↓
Advertiser has purchased the keyword:
Hindware
↓
Google displays a sponsored advertisement
↓
Advertiser pays Google when users click
This advertising model has been a major revenue driver for Google worldwide.
Google’s position was simple:
Since keywords remain invisible to users and only trigger ads behind the scenes, purchasing a trademarked keyword should not be considered trademark infringement.
Why The Court Disagreed
The Delhi High Court took a different view.
According to the judgment:
Google Was Not Just A Passive Platform
The court observed that Google:
- Suggested trademarked keywords
- Auctioned those keywords
- Earned revenue from them
- Benefited from the goodwill built by trademark owners
The judgment described this as a form of free riding on brand reputation.
In essence, the court concluded that Google was profiting from trademarks it did not own.
Google’s Response
Google maintained that its policies align with both Indian law and international advertising standards.
The company stated that:
- Advertisers cannot use trademarked terms in ad copy if it violates policy.
- Keywords are only backend triggers and are not visible to users.
- Competitive keyword bidding helps smaller businesses compete against larger brands.
- Google also indicated that it would continue addressing such matters through the legal process.
Why This Matters For Businesses
This ruling goes far beyond Hindware.
Potential Impact
For Brands
Established companies may gain stronger protection for their trademarks in digital advertising.
For Advertisers
Marketers may face restrictions when targeting competitor brand names.
For Google
The company may need to rethink parts of its keyword advertising model in India.
For The Industry
The economics of search advertising could shift significantly if similar rulings become standard.
Industry Reaction
Many founders and business leaders welcomed the decision.
Anupam Mittal, founder of Shaadi.com, summarized the concern many brands have had for years:
- You build the brand.
- Someone else bids on it.
- Google earns the money.
For many businesses, the ruling feels like a long-awaited correction.
Final Thoughts
The Hindware judgment is more than a trademark dispute.
It raises a fundamental question about ownership in the digital economy:
When a company spends years building brand equity, should competitors be allowed to buy access to that attention?
India’s courts have now offered a clear answer.
And the digital advertising industry will be watching closely to see what happens next.