Kris Lindahl built one of the fastest-growing and in-your-face real estate brands in the Midwest in part by plastering photos of himself with enthusiastically outstretched arms on billboards, buses and just about any flat surface in Minnesota.
That pose, which he calls the "Lindahl stretch," has become synonymous with the brand, Lindahl said, and now he wants to prevent others from using it.
Attorneys for the company recently filed an application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) that would trademark the pose.
"This thing has taken on a life of its own," Lindahl said in an interview Wednesday. "It's everywhere."
Much to Lindahl's dismay, the pose is showing up in too many places. He said the success of his brokerage and its association with that pose has led others to use it to promote their own businesses.

He wants them to stop, Lindahl said, in part because he wants to make the arms-out pose an even bigger part of his company's marketing.
The company is in the process rolling out a new marketing plan that will feature photographic images of KLRE agents in the same pose on intricately cut-out lawn signs that will replace the standard rectangular signs that have long been planted in front of homes that are for sale.
"Billboards are where it started," he said. "But it's so much larger now. It's not even about me anymore. It's about our team and our clients, and we don't want copycats."