Trademark Licensing
Intellectual Property and Technology | TrademarkWe structure and negotiate trademark licenses that monetize brands while maintaining quality control and preserving trademark rights.
Overview
Monetizing Brands Through Strategic Licensing
Trademark licensing enables brand owners to extend their brands into new products, channels, and markets while generating licensing revenue. Our Trademark Licensing practice structures deals that monetize brands effectively while maintaining the quality control essential to preserving trademark rights.
License Structure
Trademark licenses must be structured carefully. We address grant scope, exclusivity, territory, product categories, and distribution channels. We ensure licenses clearly define what licensees can and cannot do with the licensed marks. Ambiguous scope creates disputes; precise definition prevents them.
Quality Control Requirements
Trademark law requires that licensors maintain meaningful control over the nature and quality of goods and services bearing their marks. We structure quality control provisions that satisfy legal requirements without unduly burdening licensees. Failure to maintain quality control can result in trademark abandonment through "naked licensing."
Royalty Structures
Licensing compensation varies by industry and brand strength. We negotiate royalty rates, guaranteed minimums, and advance payments appropriate to the deal. We structure royalty calculations, reporting requirements, and audit rights ensuring licensors receive appropriate compensation.
Merchandising Programs
Brand merchandising creates significant revenue opportunities. We structure merchandising programs with multiple licensees, coordinating product categories and territories. We develop standard license terms while allowing negotiation flexibility for key licensees.
Co-Branding Arrangements
Co-branding combines multiple brands in joint marketing or products. We structure co-branding agreements addressing brand usage, quality standards, liability allocation, and termination. We protect both parties' brand equity in collaborative arrangements.
Franchise Compliance
Franchising involves trademark licensing plus additional regulatory requirements. We ensure franchise arrangements comply with FTC Franchise Rule and state franchise laws while properly licensing the trademark rights that are central to franchise systems.
Our Services
trademark
Federal registration and validity opinions
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Federal registration and validity opinions
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Federal registration and validity opinions
Licensing & Transactions
Negotiate and draft license agreements
DMCA Services
Takedown notices and counter-notices
Enforcement
Cease and desist through litigation
Fair Use Analysis
Evaluate fair use defenses and risks
Music & Entertainment
Industry-specific copyright matters
Frequently Asked Questions
Trademark law requires licensors to control quality to ensure consumers receive consistent quality when relying on the mark. Failure to maintain control creates 'naked licenses' that can abandon trademark rights.
Rates vary significantly by industry, product category, and brand strength—typically 3-10% of net sales. Comparable licenses and market factors inform appropriate rates.
Licenses should include cure periods for quality failures and termination rights if failures aren't corrected. Monitoring and enforcement are essential.
Yes, exclusive licenses grant sole rights within defined scope. Exclusivity typically commands higher royalties and may include minimum performance requirements.
Sublicensing rights must be explicitly granted. Licensors typically require approval or at minimum notification. Quality control extends through sublicense chains.
International licenses must address which country's marks are licensed, local registration requirements, and compliance with local laws. Territory definitions require precision.
Fair use is a defense that permits limited use of copyrighted material without permission. Courts consider four factors: the purpose and character of use (commercial vs. educational, transformative vs. copying), the nature of the copyrighted work, the amount used, and the effect on the market. Fair use is highly fact-specific.
For works created today by individual authors, copyright lasts for the life of the author plus 70 years. Works made for hire and anonymous/pseudonymous works are protected for 95 years from publication or 120 years from creation, whichever is shorter. Older works may have different terms.
Yes, software code is protected by copyright as a literary work. Both source code and object code can be registered. However, copyright protects the expression of ideas, not the underlying functionality—patent protection may be more appropriate for novel methods and processes implemented in software.
Our virtual legal services offer streamlined, cost-effective solutions for common copyright needs. Services like copyright registration, assignment agreements, and DMCA takedowns are available online with fixed, transparent pricing. You get the quality of a top IP firm with the convenience of digital delivery.
Related Matters
Represented streaming platform in landmark DMCA safe harbor case. Successfully defended client's safe harbor status while obtaining injunctive relief against repeat infringers, resulting in dismissal of $500M damages claim.
Prosecuted copyright infringement claims on behalf of professional photographers whose work was used without authorization. Secured significant damages award and implementation of improved licensing procedures.
Enforced copyright and trade dress rights in mobile game against clone applications. Obtained preliminary injunction and permanent removal of infringing apps from major app stores worldwide.
Cutting-edge case addressing use of copyrighted music in AI training datasets. Negotiated comprehensive licensing framework that allows continued AI development while protecting rightsholders' interests.
Prosecuted claims against former executive who copied proprietary source code to competitor. Established ownership under work-for-hire doctrine and obtained injunction plus damages for willful infringement.
Represented academic publisher in enforcement action against site hosting pirated textbooks. Implemented systematic takedown program and pursued contributory infringement claims against operators.
Get in Touch
Connect with our copyright team to discuss your matter