What this toolkit is for, and who should use it

Owning a trademark is only half the battle; keeping it strong requires active enforcement. This toolkit is a roadmap through the enforcement and litigation lifecycle—from the low-cost, everyday work of watching the marketplace, through escalating tools (demand letters, domain proceedings, TTAB oppositions and cancellations), all the way to a federal infringement trial, the expert and damages battles that decide it, and the appeal.

It serves two readers. The brand owner will learn the menu of options and the strategic logic of escalation: when a letter suffices, when a domain proceeding is the cheapest fix, and when litigation is unavoidable. The litigator will find each stage tied to a working checklist and to deeper articles on the doctrines—likelihood of confusion, survey methodology, Daubert, damages, and appellate standards—that win or lose cases.

For the rights side of the equation (how marks are obtained and maintained), see the Trademark registration toolkit. For the specialized administrative forum, see the TTAB practice toolkit.

Roadmap at a glance

  1. Watch and monitor — detect conflicts early.
  2. Assess the claim — run the likelihood-of-confusion analysis and pick a forum.
  3. Cease-and-desist — send (or respond to) a demand letter.
  4. Domain disputes (UDRP) — recover infringing or cybersquatted domains.
  5. TTAB proceedings — oppose or cancel a registration.
  6. Federal infringement suit — plead and prove §1114/§1125 claims.
  7. Likelihood of confusion at trial — the multifactor merits test.
  8. Consumer surveys and experts — build and attack survey evidence.
  9. Damages, profits, and fees — remedies and the "exceptional case."
  10. Trial and judgment — bench vs. jury and dispositive motions.
  11. Appeal — standards of review and preserving error.

Stage 1 — Watch and monitor

Enforcement begins long before any dispute. A watching program scans new USPTO filings, marketplace listings, domain registrations, social media handles, and app stores for confusingly similar uses. Early detection preserves your strongest options: a timely opposition is cheaper than a cancellation; a prompt letter avoids laches; and catching a junior user before it builds goodwill makes confusion (and your remedy) clearer. Diligent policing also rebuts later defenses that you slept on your rights or let the mark drift toward genericide.

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Stage 2 — Assess the claim and choose a forum

Before sending a single letter, analyze the merits. The core question in nearly every trademark dispute is likelihood of confusion: are consumers likely to be confused about source, sponsorship, or affiliation? Courts apply circuit-specific multifactor tests (the Polaroid factors in the Second Circuit; Sleekcraft, DuPont, and others elsewhere), weighing mark similarity, proximity of goods, strength of the senior mark, actual confusion, intent, and more. The strength of that analysis dictates everything downstream: whether to write, where to sue (federal court vs. the TTAB, which decides only registration—not infringement or damages), and how much leverage you hold.

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Stage 3 — Cease-and-desist letters

The demand letter is the workhorse of enforcement: it puts the other side on notice, opens settlement, and—if the case ever goes to court—establishes knowledge relevant to willfulness. But a poorly aimed letter can backfire, prompting a declaratory-judgment suit in an unfavorable forum or generating bad PR. Tone, specificity, the demands made, and the deadline all matter. Equally important is knowing how to respond to a letter you receive: assess the sender's actual rights, avoid admissions, and decide whether to comply, negotiate, or stand firm.

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Stage 4 — Domain-name disputes (UDRP and beyond)

When the conflict is a domain name—cybersquatting, typosquatting, or a confusingly similar URL—the Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP) is often faster and cheaper than litigation. A UDRP complaint (filed with WIPO or another approved provider) must show the domain is identical or confusingly similar to your mark, that the registrant has no legitimate interest, and that it was registered and used in bad faith. The remedy is transfer or cancellation—no damages. For monetary relief or in-rem actions, the federal Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (ACPA), 15 U.S.C. § 1125(d), remains available.

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Stage 5 — TTAB proceedings: opposition and cancellation

If the conflict is over a USPTO registration, the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board is the forum. An opposition challenges an application before it registers (within the 30-day publication window, extendable); a cancellation attacks a registration already on the register. Common grounds include likelihood of confusion, descriptiveness, abandonment, fraud, and (for older marks) certain bars. The TTAB decides only the right to register—not infringement or money—but its findings can have preclusive effect in later litigation under B&B Hardware, Inc. v. Hargis Industries, Inc., 575 U.S. 138 (2015). Our TTAB toolkit covers the procedure end-to-end.

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Stage 6 — Federal infringement litigation

When administrative remedies are insufficient, you sue in federal court. The principal claims are infringement of a registered mark under 15 U.S.C. § 1114 and false designation of origin / unregistered-mark infringement under § 1125(a), often joined with dilution (§ 1125(c)), ACPA, and state-law claims. The complaint must plead ownership, protectability, and likelihood of confusion. Early motions address jurisdiction, venue, and preliminary injunctions; the case then proceeds through discovery to summary judgment or trial. Litigators should fold in the broader federal civil litigation playbook for pleadings, discovery, and motion practice.

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Preliminary injunctions and early relief

In many trademark cases the real fight is the preliminary injunction: an order stopping the infringing use while the case proceeds. The movant must show likelihood of success on the merits, irreparable harm, a balance of equities in its favor, and that an injunction serves the public interest. The Trademark Modernization Act of 2020 restored a rebuttable presumption of irreparable harm upon a finding of likely (or actual) infringement (15 U.S.C. § 1116(a)), reversing the uncertainty that followed eBay v. MercExchange in the trademark context. Because a preliminary injunction often ends the dispute as a practical matter, both sides front-load their best confusion evidence—including early survey work—into the motion.

Defenses to anticipate

A defendant has a deep bench of defenses, and a plaintiff should pressure-test for them before filing: lack of protectable rights or secondary meaning; fair use (descriptive fair use under 15 U.S.C. § 1115(b)(4) and nominative fair use); functionality (for trade dress); abandonment through non-use or naked licensing; genericness; prior use and the Tea Rose-Rectanus geographic-rights doctrine; and the equitable defenses of laches, acquiescence, and unclean hands. Many of these can also be asserted offensively as counterclaims to cancel the plaintiff's registration.

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Stage 7 — Likelihood of confusion at trial

Likelihood of confusion is the merits engine of the case, and at trial the multifactor test is applied to a full evidentiary record. The factors are non-exclusive and no single one is dispositive; courts weigh mark similarity (sight, sound, meaning), relatedness of the goods/services and channels of trade, the senior mark's commercial strength, evidence of actual confusion, the defendant's intent, and consumer sophistication. On summary judgment, courts ask whether the factors so favor one side that no reasonable jury could disagree—often a high bar given the fact-intensive nature of the inquiry.

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Stage 8 — Consumer surveys and expert evidence

Because confusion is about consumer perception, consumer surveys are frequently the most powerful (and most contested) evidence in trademark litigation. The two workhorse designs are the Eveready format (for strong marks) and the Squirt format (for narrower comparisons), each with its own universe, stimulus, and control requirements. A flawed universe, leading questions, or a missing control invites exclusion. The opposing side will mount a Daubert challenge under Federal Rule of Evidence 702, attacking methodology, reliability, and fit. Survey design and survey-expert vetting are specialized skills worth getting right before the report is served.

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Stage 9 — Damages, profits, and attorney's fees

Trademark remedies under 15 U.S.C. § 1117 include the defendant's profits, the plaintiff's actual damages (which may be trebled in appropriate cases), and costs. Disgorgement of profits no longer requires proof of willfulness after Romag Fasteners, Inc. v. Fossil, Inc., 590 U.S. 212 (2020), though willfulness remains a key equitable factor. Damages must be apportioned to the infringement and supported by reliable proof; speculative awards are vulnerable. Attorney's fees are available in "exceptional" cases under § 1117(a), with courts applying the totality-of-the-circumstances standard imported from Octane Fitness into Lanham Act practice. Building (or defeating) an exceptional-case record starts early.

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Stage 10 — Trial: bench vs. jury and dispositive motions

Whether a trademark case is tried to a judge or a jury affects strategy from the pleadings forward. Claims for legal damages typically carry a Seventh Amendment jury right, while equitable claims (injunctions, disgorgement) and TTAB-style registrability questions are for the court—so mixed cases require careful sequencing. The choice influences how surveys and the confusion factors are presented, jury instructions, and the standard a verdict will face on appeal. Dispositive motions (summary judgment on confusion, validity, or defenses) often shape what actually reaches the factfinder.

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Stage 11 — Appeal

A trademark judgment can be appealed to the regional U.S. Court of Appeals; the standard of review is decisive. Likelihood of confusion is generally reviewed for clear error where it is treated as a finding of fact (and Polaroid/Sleekcraft balancing is fact-laden), while legal rulings get de novo review and evidentiary calls (including survey admission) are reviewed for abuse of discretion. Preserving error at trial—objections, offers of proof, Rule 50 motions—is what makes an appeal viable. Know your circuit's standards before you try the case, not after.

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This toolkit is general information, not legal advice. Procedural deadlines, local rules, and fee amounts change—verify current requirements before acting.