Design Trademark Strategy
Build a systematic trademark strategy to select a protectable mark, clear it for use, and secure registration.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: USPTO, INTA, trademark attorneys in all major law firms; required in brand-building and M&A due diligence
Impact: USPTO data shows that registered trademarks have a significantly stronger presumption of validity and ownership (constructive notice nationwide); unregistered marks are limited to actual geographic areas of use and cannot use the ® symbol, materially weakening enforcement position.
Why best: Trademark strategy is risk management for brand investment. Building a brand on a weak or conflicting mark creates legal exposure that grows proportionally with marketing spend. A systematic clearance process before launch, followed by timely registration, protects the brand investment and enables enforcement against infringers.
Steps
- Understand the distinctiveness spectrum — Fanciful (invented, strongest protection: Kodak, Xerox) → Arbitrary (real word applied to unrelated goods: Apple for computers) → Suggestive (suggests qualities, requires imagination: Netflix) → Descriptive (describes the product: 1-800-Flowers — weak, requires acquired distinctiveness) → Generic (category name: cannot be trademarked). Select fanciful or arbitrary marks for strongest protection.
- Conduct preliminary clearance search — Run a free search on USPTO TESS (Trademark Electronic Search System) for identical and similar marks in the same International Class; also search common law databases, domain registrations, and social media handles.
- Commission a comprehensive clearance search — Before investing significantly in a brand, commission a full clearance search from a trademark search firm (Thomson CompuMark, Corsearch); covers federal, state, and common law marks; provides attorney opinion letter on risk level.
- Assess likelihood of confusion — Apply the DuPont factors: similarity of marks (appearance, sound, meaning), relatedness of goods/services, strength of the cited mark, channels of trade, sophistication of purchasers, actual confusion evidence; all factors weighed together, no single factor is dispositive.
- Select International Nice Classification (NCL) classes — Identify which of the 45 Nice Classification classes cover your goods and services; register in all classes where you currently operate or plan to within 3 years; registration is class-specific.
- File the USPTO application — Choose filing basis: use-in-commerce (already in use — file with specimen showing use) or intent-to-use (planning to use within 3 years — file 1(b)); provide clear identification of goods/services; pay per-class filing fee (~$250–$350 per class TEAS Plus).
- Monitor and respond to office actions — USPTO examiner may issue office actions (refusals for likelihood of confusion, descriptiveness, or procedural issues); respond within 3 months (extendable to 6) with legal arguments and/or amendments; non-response = abandonment.
- Maintain the registration — File Section 8 Declaration of Continued Use between years 5–6; Section 9 Renewal every 10 years; file Section 15 Incontestability Declaration after 5 years of continuous use (strengthens the mark significantly); monitor the trademark register for conflicting new filings.
Rules
- Never use ® until the mark is actually registered with the USPTO (or relevant national office); using ® on an unregistered mark is a federal violation. Use ™ for unregistered marks.
- Always clear a mark before investing heavily in brand-building; the cost of rebranding after receiving a cease-and-desist letter dwarfs the cost of clearance.
- File an intent-to-use application before launching a brand publicly; this establishes a constructive use date from the application filing date, providing priority over later applicants.
- Register domain names and social media handles before or simultaneously with the trademark application; trademark registration does not automatically transfer digital assets.
- Develop a trademark watch service to monitor for confusingly similar new filings after registration; failure to police the mark can constitute abandonment of distinctiveness.
Examples
Mark selection: Startup choosing a brand name for a project management tool. "ProjectFlow" — descriptive, weak mark, likely refused by USPTO. "Asana" — arbitrary (yoga term applied to software), strong mark. "Mondaytask" — descriptive. Recommendation: select an invented or arbitrary mark; run clearance search on final candidates before launch.
Common Mistakes
- Filing in too few classes — Registering only in Class 42 (software) when the business also offers consulting services (Class 35) leaves the consulting offering unprotected.
- Allowing trademark to become generic — Aspirin, escalator, trampoline were once trademarks; active enforcement (including correcting generic use in media) is required to preserve distinctiveness.
- Ignoring common law rights of prior users — A USPTO registration does not extinguish prior common law rights in the geographic area where an earlier unregistered user was operating; conduct common law searches.
Law disclaimer: This skill encodes professional best practices for educational purposes. It is not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney before making legal decisions.