What you get in due diligence
Before you invest in marketing, domains and collateral, it is prudent to check whether your brand conflicts with earlier rights. Due diligence includes clearance risk assessment and refusal risks (e.g., descriptive marks, lack of distinctiveness, incorrect class selection).
Scope of support
- deciding whether you register a word mark, logo, or a combined mark,
- class selection (goods/services) and safer descriptions,
- initial searches and similarity analysis (dispute risk),
- coordination of filing in the relevant office,
- handling office actions and correspondence within the agreed scope.
What drives price and timeline
- jurisdiction (US / EU / Poland / other),
- number of classes and mark variants,
- whether a deeper search report is needed,
- office objections or third‑party oppositions.
Important note
Trademark registration is an administrative procedure. The outcome depends on earlier rights and office decisions. This service coordinates the process within the agreed legal scope and is not a guarantee of registration.
What the service includes
- trademark availability search (similarity/conflicts/risk),
- strategy recommendation: word mark vs. logo, classes, territorial scope,
- preparing the application and handling correspondence during the registration process (scope depends on jurisdiction).
Why due diligence matters
A common mistake is filing without checking similar marks. This can result in oppositions, refusals, or even a forced rebrand after investing in marketing. A pre‑filing review helps you assess risk and cost before committing.
What you receive
- a practical search memo/report,
- proposed classes and wording,
- an application draft and further handling per agreed scope.
Note: outcomes depend on the office and third‑party filings; registration is not guaranteed.
