How can a business protect its trade secrets?
Simply calling information a trade secret will not make it so. A business must affirmatively behave in a way that proves its desire to keep the information secret. Some companies go to extreme lengths — for example, the formula for Coca-Cola (perhaps the world’s most famous trade secret) is kept locked in a bank vault that can be opened only by a resolution of the Coca-Cola Company’s board of directors. Only two Coca-Cola employees ever know the formula at the same time; their identities are never disclosed to the public and they are not allowed to fly on the same airplane. Fortunately, such extraordinary trade secrecy protection measures are seldom necessary. Although you should take reasonable precautions to protect any information you regard as a trade secret, you don’t have to turn your office into an armed camp to do so. Sensible precautions include marking documents containing trade secrets “Confidential,” locking trade secret materials away after business hours, maintaining com