Trademark watch questions people actually ask.
What is a trademark watch?
A trademark watch is an ongoing monitoring service that scans trademark journals, registries, and, optionally, marketplaces and domains for newly filed or published marks that conflict with yours, and alerts you while you can still act, typically while the opposition window is open. It is the early-warning system that lets a trademark owner defend a registered mark, because the registry does not police your mark for you.
Why do I need a trademark watch if my mark is already registered?
Because registration does not stop others from applying for similar marks, and the trademark office will not object on your behalf. It will examine and advertise a confusingly similar mark, and unless you oppose it in time, it can register alongside yours, diluting your brand. A watch ensures you find out about conflicts during the short window when opposing them is cheap and effective, rather than after they have registered.
What is the difference between a trademark search and a trademark watch?
A trademark search is a one-time check, usually done before you file, to see whether your proposed mark conflicts with existing ones. A trademark watch is continuous monitoring, after you own the mark, for new conflicting applications by others. A search looks backward at what already exists; a watch looks forward at what is being filed. You search before registering and watch after.
How long do I have to oppose a conflicting trademark?
It varies by country, but the window is always limited and runs from the date the mark is advertised in the journal. In India it is four months from advertisement. Miss it and the mark proceeds toward registration, after which your only route is a cancellation or rectification action, which is slower and more expensive. The entire purpose of a watch is to make sure you act inside that window. When we catch a real threat, we move straight to opposition.
What happens when the watch finds a conflicting mark?
An IP lawyer reviews it and tells you whether it is a genuine threat. If it is, we recommend and, with your go-ahead, take the right action, usually a formal opposition within the window, sometimes a cease and desist or a negotiated coexistence, depending on the situation. The watch does not just alert you and leave you to figure it out; it flows into a response.
Can I watch my trademark in multiple countries?
Yes. A multi-jurisdiction watch monitors the registries and journals of all the markets that matter to your business, India, the US, the EU, the UK, and others, coordinated through one team rather than separate local watch services you have to manage yourself. Trademark rights are territorial, so for a brand operating across borders, multi-country monitoring is what real protection looks like.
Is a trademark watch the same as monitoring for counterfeits online?
They overlap but are not identical. A classic trademark watch focuses on the registries, new applications that could register and conflict with your mark. Online and marketplace monitoring focuses on actual unauthorised use, counterfeits, copycats, fake accounts, in the market now. We offer both, and many brands need both: the registry watch protects the right, the online watch protects the market. Online finds often lead to a takedown or cease and desist.
How much does a trademark watch cost?
It is scoped to the number of marks, the classes, and the jurisdictions monitored, and is a modest ongoing cost relative to what it protects and to the cost of cleaning up a conflict you missed. For businesses with several marks, a watch is often most efficient as part of an ongoing legal retainer. We quote your watch specifically.