11. How to Trademark Your Brand Without a Lawyer

Overview
Curriculum
  • 1 Section
  • 3 Lessons
  • 28m Duration
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Learning Guide

LESSON OVERVIEW:

Why Trademarks Matter

  •  TM has no legal meaning. Marketing teams use it to suggest ownership or flag intent to register — but overusing it can invite challenges from real trademark owners.
  • ® is a federally registered trademark granted by the USPTO. It’s the only symbol that carries real legal protection. Federal filing fee: $350. No attorney required.
  • Local businesses (plumbers, salons, coffee shops) generally don’t need federal registration. But if you sell online or plan to scale, it’s essential.

Key Insight: The TM symbol has no legal weight. Go for the ®.

Three Cautionary Tales

  • Donnie’s Green Planet Lawn Care: In this fictional example, a Pennsylvania franchisor registers “Green Planet,” sells a franchise in Donnie’s town, and sends a cease-and-desist. Common law rights should protect Donnie, but mean nothing without money for a legal fight.
  • The Grange Public House: In this real story, a beloved Irish pub in my neighborhood was forced to rebrand as The Marley House after a national farming organization claims the Grange name.
  • Nann Miller Enterprises: My mother had to add a second “n” to her name after another Nan Miller challenged her use of her own un-registered business name.

Key Insight: Your rights don’t matter if you can’t afford a legal fight. A $350 registration is cheap insurance.

The Spectrum of Trademarkability

Where your name falls on the spectrum determines whether your name can be trademarked, lives in the gray area, or is not trademarkable:

Type Registrability Examples
Generic Unregistrable Burger, Gas and Oil
Descriptive Difficult Hot Pockets®
Suggestive Gray zone Whataburger®, PizzaFire®
Fanciful Strong Apple Inc.®
Coined Strongest — easiest Häagen-Dazs®, Fuddruckers®

The Step-by-Step Process

Lesson 11 takes you through the entire DIY process so you can avoid an expensive lawyer.

  • Step 1 — Search.
  • Step 2 — Description.
  • Step 3 — Specimen.
  • Step 4 — File.

After Registration: Two Calendar Dates

  • Year 5: File a Declaration of Use Under Section 8. Set a calendar reminder the day your registration is confirmed.
  • Year 9–10: File a combined renewal with a larger fee — then every 10 years for the life of the trademark.

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