Own the Brand
You Already Built
You grew the audience. You put the name on everything you make. But building a brand isn’t the same as owning it — and until it’s filed, someone else can claim it first.
Start the ProcessThe DIY Trap Is Where Most Applications Quietly Die
DIY sites make it look like a simple form — so the clearance search, the right class, and the examiner response all get skipped. Then the USPTO pushes back, and you’re on your own.
File alone, hope for the best
You submit the application yourself and find out later what was missing.
- No real clearance search before you file
- Wrong class or vague description of goods and services
- An office action lands and no one answers it
- The service files and disappears
- You could be forced to rebrand what you built
Filed right, with someone in your corner
We run the search, file it correctly, and stay with the file through the process.
- Comprehensive U.S. clearance search first
- The correct class and a proper specimen
- Office action back-and-forth handled by an attorney
- One flat fee — no hourly surprises
- The name locked down in your business’s name
One Flat Fee.
Your Trademark, Filed Right.
No hourly billing, no surprise invoices. One price covers the clearance search, the filing, and a real attorney of record on your application.
- Comprehensive U.S. Trademark Clearance Search
- USPTO Trademark Application Preparation & Filing
- U.S. Attorney of Record
- All Non-Substantive Office Action Responses
- Domain & Social-Media Availability Check
- (1) USPTO Class Filing Fee ($350 USD) included
- Client Portal Access
- BONUS: Six (6) months of trademark monitoring after registration
Additional USPTO class filing fees are billed at cost if your mark needs more than one class. Government filing fees are set by the USPTO and subject to change.
A Real Trademark Attorney in Your Corner
I’m Liscah Isaboke, a trademark attorney. I help creators, founders, and digital entrepreneurs across the U.S. own the brand they’ve already built.
DIY services file the form and disappear. I run the clearance search, file it right, and stay with you if the examiner has questions — all for one flat fee, no hourly surprises.
- Licensed to practice before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
- Filed applications for creators, founders, and digital entrepreneurs nationwide
- Flat-fee filing — you know the price before we start
What It Feels Like to Actually Own Your Name
Put your brand on everything — products, merch, the next launch — and stop wondering if it’s actually yours. Once it’s filed in your business’s name, the second-guessing stops.
License it
A registered mark is an asset you can license, franchise, or attach to a deal — on your terms.
Grow it
Expand across products and classes knowing the foundation of your name is already secured.
Build on it
Launch with confidence — the name is locked down in your business’s name, not somebody else’s.
Frequently asked questions
Answers to common questions about consultations, filings, office actions, and protecting your brand.
A Substantive Office Action raises legal issues with your trademark itself. Common substantive issues include:
- Likelihood of confusion — your mark is too similar to an existing registered trademark
- Merely descriptive — your mark just describes your product or service (like "Fast Delivery" for a courier service)
- Geographically descriptive — your mark is just a place name (like "California Wine")
- Generic terms — you're trying to trademark a common word for your industry
- Ornamental refusal — your mark appears decorative rather than identifying your brand
These responses require legal arguments and evidence to overcome. They're complex and typically need attorney expertise.
No, you're not legally required to hire an attorney to file a trademark application with the USPTO. However, most business owners hire one because a single mistake can permanently derail your application.
The reality: the USPTO filing fee is $350 per class whether you DIY or hire help. But an attorney ensures proper clearance searches, correct classifications, appropriate specimens, and accurate descriptions — all things that commonly trip up DIY filers and lead to refusals.
A rejected application means starting over, paying fees again, and losing months while competitors could file similar marks. Trademark protection is a long-term business asset, and investing in proper legal guidance upfront saves time, money, and headaches down the road.
Ready to Protect Your IP?
If you’ve been meaning to lock down your brand's assets, start here. Answer a few quick questions and we’ll take it from there.