HomeServicesIPRBrand Protection & IP Portfolio Management

IPR · Design, GI & Brand Protection

Brand Protection & IP Portfolio Management

A brand is rarely protected by a single trademark filed once and forgotten.

Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986

2,000+Clients since 1986
42 yrsCA practice
4Offices · India & UAE
24 hrsResponse time

A brand is rarely protected by a single trademark filed once and forgotten. It is protected by a deliberate portfolio — the right marks, in the right classes, in the right jurisdictions, backed by copyright in your creative assets, design registration for your product appearance, domain and social-handle control, and a monitoring-and-enforcement discipline that catches conflicts before they become disputes. PNPC Global builds and manages that portfolio as a single coordinated engagement rather than a series of one-off filings. We map your brand's commercial footprint — current and planned — against the Nice Classification, the Copyright Act 1957, the Designs Act 2000, and cross-border filing routes such as the Madrid Protocol, then structure a portfolio that is defensible in litigation, clean in investor diligence, and affordable to maintain over its life. For clients with UAE or wider GCC exposure, our Dubai office coordinates the same discipline across borders under one engagement.

What it costs

Govt. feesGovernment & statutory fees as applicable to your case
Professional feeFixed professional fee — confirmed in writing before we start

No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.

What Brand Protection & IP Portfolio Management is

Brand protection and IP portfolio management is the advisory and execution practice of identifying every intellectual property asset a business owns or should own — trademarks (word marks, logo marks, composite marks), copyright in creative works (packaging design, website content, software, marketing collateral), registered designs (product shape, ornamentation, configuration), and in some cases geographical indications or trade secrets — and then structuring, filing, and maintaining that portfolio as a coordinated whole rather than isolated transactions. In India, trademarks are governed by the Trade Marks Act 1999 and administered through the Trade Marks Registry on the IP India portal (ipindia.gov.in), copyright by the Copyright Act 1957 and the Copyright Office, and industrial designs by the Designs Act 2000. A business selling a single branded product typically touches at least two of these regimes simultaneously — the brand name and logo under trademark law, and the product's visual design or packaging artwork under design and copyright law respectively — yet these are frequently filed by different, uncoordinated advisors, or not filed at all until a dispute forces the question.

Portfolio management goes beyond first filing. It means classifying the full commercial footprint of a brand across the 45 Nice Classes (Classes 1–34 for goods, 35–45 for services) so that adjacent and defensive classes are not left open to a competitor, tracking renewal cycles across every mark (10-year renewal cycle for trademarks under Form TM-R, no renewal requirement for copyright which subsists for the author's lifetime plus 60 years, and design registration renewable for a second 5-year term after the initial 10 years under the Designs Act), and maintaining a live watch on the Trade Marks Journal, competitor filings, e-commerce marketplaces, and domain registrars for conflicting use. A well-run portfolio also assigns IP correctly — founders who file a trademark in their personal name before incorporation, or a designer who retains copyright in a logo they were commissioned to create, are common and expensive gaps that surface during funding or acquisition diligence and must be fixed retroactively through formal assignment (Form TM-P for trademarks, a written deed of assignment under Section 18 of the Copyright Act for copyright).

Brand protection strategy is the decision layer above the filings: which marks matter most commercially and should be defended aggressively, which classes are genuinely at risk of dilution versus which are low-priority, whether international filing via the Madrid Protocol (administered by WIPO, of which India and the UAE are both members) is cost-justified given your expansion plans, and what enforcement posture — from a polite cease-and-desist to full civil suit under Section 29 of the Trade Marks Act — fits the commercial stakes of a given infringement. For funded or scaling businesses, this strategy is also inseparable from cap-table and diligence hygiene: investors and acquirers routinely treat an unregistered or poorly assigned brand as an open risk factor regardless of the company's financial position.

PNPC Global structures this as a single advisory-led engagement precisely because trademark, copyright, and design protection intersect constantly with company law, FEMA/FDI diligence, GST invoicing on licensing royalties, and tax treatment of IP transfers — matters that sit naturally within a Chartered Accountancy practice rather than a standalone trademark filing shop. Trademark, design, and copyright filings themselves are executed through registered trademark agents, patent and design agents, and copyright registration professionals with whom PNPC has an established working relationship; PNPC's role is to design the strategy, coordinate the portfolio as a whole, and ensure the tax, corporate, and compliance dimensions are addressed alongside the IP filing itself.

When a coordinated brand protection strategy is the right approach

You hold, or are about to file, more than one IP asset for the same brand — a name, a logo, packaging artwork, and a product shape — and want them filed and tracked as one coherent portfolio rather than separate uncoordinated matters

You are expanding into new product lines, geographies, or e-commerce marketplaces and need to assess which additional Nice Classes, jurisdictions, or IP types require protection before competitors move in

You are raising investment or preparing for acquisition, and diligence readiness requires a clean, correctly assigned IP portfolio with no personal-name filings, unassigned designer copyrights, or lapsed registrations

Your brand has commercial value across India and the UAE (or other export markets) and you need filing and enforcement coordinated across jurisdictions rather than through disconnected local agents

You have an existing but unmanaged portfolio of registrations — filed years ago, possibly by different advisors — and need an audit to identify gaps, upcoming renewals, and misclassifications before they become liabilities

You are licensing your brand to franchisees, distributors, or manufacturing partners and need the underlying IP portfolio, licence agreements, and royalty/GST treatment structured correctly from the outset

A competitor or counterfeiter has begun using assets confusingly similar to yours, and you need a strategic view of which enforcement route — opposition, rectification, infringement suit, or passing-off action — fits the situation, rather than a single isolated filing response

When a lighter-touch, single-filing approach may be more appropriate

You have exactly one brand name to protect, no logo, no distinctive packaging, and no near-term expansion plans — a standalone trademark registration engagement is simpler and sufficient for now

You are still testing product-market fit and have not committed to a final brand name, logo, or packaging design — portfolio strategy is most valuable once the brand elements are settled

Your business operates in a single, narrow local market with no export, franchising, licensing, or marketplace-scale ambitions, where a wider multi-class or multi-jurisdiction portfolio would not be commercially justified

You need a single, narrowly scoped service — for example, only a copyright registration for a software codebase, or only a one-off cease-and-desist letter — where engaging a full portfolio strategy adds cost without corresponding benefit

The business is being wound down or the brand is being permanently discontinued, and no continuing commercial value justifies portfolio-level investment in monitoring, renewal, or expansion filings

Structure Comparison

Brand protection instruments compared — how each piece of the portfolio contributes to overall protection

FeatureTrademark (word/logo/composite)Copyright (creative works)Registered Design (product appearance)Domain / Social Handle
Governing statuteTrade Marks Act 1999Copyright Act 1957Designs Act 2000Contractual / platform policy + ICANN UDRP / INDRP
What is protectedBrand name, logo, or combination used to distinguish goods/servicesOriginal literary, artistic, musical, or software works — packaging artwork, website copy, codeThe visual appearance — shape, pattern, ornamentation — of a mass-produced articleRegistration of a specific domain string or social media handle
Registering authorityTrade Marks Registry, IP India (ipindia.gov.in)Copyright Office, Ministry of Commerce and IndustryDesign Office (under the Patent Office), IP IndiaDomain registrars (.in via NIXI/registrars; gTLDs via ICANN registrars); platforms directly for handles
Term of protection10 years, renewable indefinitely every 10 yearsAuthor's lifetime + 60 years (rules vary by work type — e.g. 60 years from publication for corporate/anonymous works)10 years, extendable once by 5 years (15 years total)Ongoing while registration/renewal fees are paid; no fixed statutory term
Registration mandatory to have rightsNo — unregistered use gives passing-off rights, but registration gives far stronger statutory remediesNo — copyright subsists automatically on creation of an original work; registration is evidentiary, not rights-creatingYes for the specific 'newness' protection — an unregistered design has materially weaker legal protectionYes, in the practical sense — an unregistered handle/domain can be taken by anyone
Typical registration timeline (India)18–30 months to full registration (uncontested); priority protected from filing dateWeeks to a few months for straightforward applicationsTypically a few months where no objection is raisedImmediate on successful registration, subject to availability
Cross-border extension routeMadrid Protocol (WIPO) — India and UAE both membersBerne Convention — automatic reciprocal recognition in member countries, no separate filing generally requiredHague System (India is not yet a member as of current practice — direct national filing typically required in each country)Country-code domains filed per-country; global platforms are single-registration but jurisdiction-neutral
Common gap PNPC findsFiled in founder's personal name instead of the companyDesigner/agency retains copyright because no written assignment was signed at commissioningProduct shape never registered — treated as 'just packaging' until a copycat appearsDomain/handle not secured before public launch — squatted by a third party

These instruments are complementary, not alternatives — a well-protected consumer brand typically uses three or four of them simultaneously. The right combination and sequencing depends on your product, business model, and expansion timeline; PNPC's portfolio review identifies the specific combination that matters for your business rather than defaulting to a one-size-fits-all filing list.

How it works
#StageWhat PNPC DoesRealistic Timeline
1Brand & IP Asset InventoryWe map every commercial asset with IP value: brand names, logos, taglines, packaging artwork, product shapes, website and app content, proprietary processes, domain names, and social handles — across every product line and market you operate in or plan to enter within 18–24 months.1–2 weeks
2Portfolio Gap AuditFor businesses with existing registrations, we pull every trademark, copyright, and design record tied to the brand and check: correct proprietor name, correct class coverage, upcoming renewal dates, and any personal-name filings that need reassignment to the company. For new brands, we assess what should be filed and in what sequence.1–2 weeks (existing portfolio) or done alongside Stage 1 (new brand)
3Class & Jurisdiction StrategyWe determine the Nice Classes genuinely relevant to your business (core goods/services class plus defensive adjacent classes, and Class 35 for any retail/marketplace-facing brand), and whether India-only filing suffices or Madrid Protocol / direct national filing in the UAE or other export markets is commercially justified.1 week, run alongside Stage 2
4Trademark Search & ClearanceA structured search on the IP India public database for identical and deceptively similar marks across every class identified in Stage 3, cross-referenced against MCA company/LLP name records and domain availability, before any filing is committed.3–5 working days per mark/class set
5Trademark Filing — Form TM-AWord mark, logo mark, and/or composite mark filings via a registered trademark agent, in the classes agreed in Stage 3. DPIIT/Udyam eligibility is checked first to secure the reduced government fee (₹4,500 per class versus ₹9,000 per class) where applicable.Filed same week as clearance; application number issued within 48 hours
6Copyright Registration — Creative AssetsFor packaging artwork, distinctive website/app content, software, or other original works central to the brand, we coordinate copyright registration with the Copyright Office to create an official evidentiary record and precise date of registration, alongside the automatic protection that already exists on creation.Weeks to a few months depending on the Copyright Office's processing queue
7Design Registration — Product AppearanceWhere the product's shape, configuration, or ornamentation is itself a source of brand recognition (distinctive bottle shape, packaging silhouette, product form), we file for design registration under the Designs Act 2000 — a separate protection from both trademark and copyright.A few months where no objection is raised
8IP Assignment Clean-UpWhere marks were filed in a founder's personal name, or copyright in commissioned creative work was never formally assigned to the company, we prepare and execute the correct assignment deeds (Form TM-P for trademarks; written deed under Section 18 of the Copyright Act for copyright) so the company — not an individual — holds the asset.2–4 weeks depending on the number of assets to reassign
9Domain & Handle ConsolidationWe confirm the brand's key domains and social handles are registered under the company's name and control, not an individual's personal account or an external agency's account, and flag any gaps for immediate registration before a squatter takes them.1 week
10Examination & Objection HandlingWhere the Trade Marks Registry raises objections via a First Examination Report, or the Copyright Office or Design Office raises queries, PNPC drafts and files the response within the statutory window and represents the client at any Hearing.As objections arise — typically within 30 days of each report
11Journal Publication & Opposition MonitoringOnce a trademark is accepted and published in the Trade Marks Journal, we monitor the 4-month opposition window and advise on any third-party opposition, while also watching the Journal for conflicting marks filed by others that may warrant a pre-emptive opposition from you.4 months per mark, ongoing thereafter as a watch service
12Portfolio Maintenance & Renewal CalendarEvery asset in the portfolio — trademarks (10-year cycles), designs (5-year renewal after the initial 10 years), and domains (typically annual) — is entered into a single compliance calendar, with renewal initiated well ahead of each deadline rather than reactively.Ongoing, for the life of the portfolio
13Enforcement & Dispute ResponseWhen conflicting or infringing use is detected — through the watch service or a client report — we assess the strongest available remedy (opposition, rectification, cease-and-desist, infringement suit, or passing-off action) and coordinate execution, including with IP litigation counsel where matters proceed to court.As needed — PNPC on call

A full portfolio build for a mid-sized brand — 2–3 trademark classes, one copyright registration, one design registration, domain consolidation — realistically takes 2–4 months of active work to file everything, with trademark registration itself completing 18–30 months later in the background. The commercial protection (priority date, ™ usage, automatic copyright subsistence) begins from each individual filing or creation date, not from full portfolio completion.

Document Checklist
Brand & Business Information

Full list of brand names, sub-brands, product names, and taglines currently in use or planned for the next 18–24 months

High-resolution copies of all logos, wordmarks, and composite marks, including any colour-specific or black-and-white variants in use

Description of goods and services sold under each brand or sub-brand, and the markets/states in which each is sold or planned to be sold

Company or LLP Certificate of Incorporation and CIN/LLPIN — for confirming the correct proprietor name on all filings

DPIIT Recognition Certificate or Udyam Registration Certificate — to confirm eligibility for reduced government trademark fees

List of existing trademark, copyright, or design registrations already held, with registration numbers, classes, and expiry/renewal dates if known

For Trademark Filings

Exact wording of each mark to be registered, including capitalisation and stylisation as it should appear on the Register

Date of first commercial use of each mark, with supporting evidence (invoice, packaging, advertisement) where available — strengthens the application against future opposition

Board resolution authorising the trademark application(s) and naming the authorised signatory

Power of Attorney in favour of the registered trademark agent through whom PNPC files

Specification of goods/services for each class — PNPC drafts this to be broad enough to protect commercial use but specific enough to withstand examiner objections

For Copyright Registration

Original creative work to be registered — packaging artwork files, website/app content, software source code, marketing collateral — in the format required by the Copyright Office

Details of the author/creator of each work, and the date and place of first publication (if published)

Assignment deed or work-for-hire agreement with any external designer, agency, or freelancer who created the work — needed to confirm the company, not the individual creator, owns the copyright

No Objection Certificate from any co-author or collaborator on the work, where applicable

For Design Registration

Representation sheets showing the product design from multiple angles, in the format prescribed under the Designs Rules

Statement of novelty — a description of what is new or original about the design compared to existing designs in the market

Confirmation that the design has not already been publicly disclosed or sold for more than 12 months prior to filing (a design loses novelty and is no longer registrable outside this grace period)

Class of the design under the Locarno Classification applicable to industrial designs

For IP Assignment / Portfolio Clean-Up

Existing registration certificates or application acknowledgements where a mark, copyright, or design was filed in a founder's or designer's personal name

Signed assignment deed transferring ownership to the company (Form TM-P for trademarks; written deed under Section 18 of the Copyright Act for copyright; equivalent design assignment documentation)

Consideration details for the assignment (even a nominal amount, or documented as part of the original engagement) — required for the assignment to be valid and for correct stamp duty treatment

Updated Board resolution ratifying the assignment and authorising its recording with the relevant Registry

For International / Madrid Protocol Filing

Valid Indian base trademark application or registration — a prerequisite for filing through the Madrid Protocol

List of Madrid Protocol member countries to be designated (India and the UAE are both members; over 130 countries participate)

Certified copy of the Indian base application/registration, and translations where required by the designated country

Local agent details for any designated country requiring in-country prosecution of an objection

Ongoing obligations
PhaseTriggerPNPC ActionRisk If Ignored
Brand LaunchNew product, sub-brand, or business line finalisedFull IP asset inventory, trademark clearance search, class strategy, and coordinated filing across trademark, copyright, and design as relevant — before public launch.Launching without clearance risks a conflicting prior mark forcing a rebrand after marketing spend has already gone out. Unregistered creative assets and product designs have materially weaker protection against copycats from Day 1.
Filing & ExaminationApplications filed across trademark/copyright/designTracking of every application number and priority date; drafting and filing of any First Examination Report responses or Registry queries within statutory deadlines; representation at Hearings if scheduled.Missed FER response deadline (30 days, extendable) results in the application being deemed abandoned — losing the priority date and requiring a fresh filing that may now face new conflicts.
Publication & Opposition WindowTrademark accepted and published in the Trade Marks JournalActive monitoring of the 4-month opposition window; parallel watch for conflicting marks filed by competitors around the same period that may warrant a pre-emptive opposition.An opposition against your mark that is not properly defended results in refusal. A conflicting competitor mark that is not opposed within the window can only later be challenged through the slower, costlier rectification route.
Registration & Portfolio ConsolidationCertificates of Registration issued across the portfolioAll registration numbers, classes, and renewal dates entered into a single compliance calendar. Domain and social handle audit completed. Any personal-name filings reassigned to the company via formal assignment.An unconsolidated portfolio with scattered ownership creates diligence red flags at the first funding round or acquisition, and assignment clean-up under deal-timeline pressure is materially more expensive than doing it proactively.
Ongoing Monitoring & EnforcementPortfolio is live and commercially activeTrade Marks Journal watch, marketplace and domain monitoring, and a defined escalation path — cease-and-desist, opposition, rectification, or infringement suit — matched to the scale of any detected conflict.An unmonitored registration is, in practical commercial terms, close to unregistered — infringers establish market presence undetected, and a mark left unused for 5 years and 3 months becomes vulnerable to a non-use rectification petition under Section 47 of the Trade Marks Act.
Renewal CycleTrademark 10-year renewal; design 5-year extension; domain annual renewalRenewal initiated well ahead of each deadline across every asset in the portfolio — trademark renewal via Form TM-R typically 9 months before expiry, design extension before the initial 10-year term lapses, domains before their annual expiry.A lapsed trademark loses its priority date entirely; a fresh filing may now conflict with marks registered in the interim. A lapsed design registration cannot be revived after the maximum 15-year term. A lapsed domain can be captured by a squatter or competitor within hours of expiry.
Expansion — New Markets or ClassesBusiness expands into new products, states, or export markets (including UAE/GCC)Reassessment of class coverage for new product lines; Madrid Protocol or direct national filing advisory for new export markets; UAE filings coordinated through PNPC's Dubai office alongside the India portfolio.Expanding into a new class or market without prior clearance risks discovering, after investment, that the desired mark is unavailable or already used by a local incumbent — India and the UAE are both first-to-file jurisdictions.
Funding, Licensing, or Acquisition EventInvestor term sheet, franchise/licensing deal, or M&A process beginsFull IP portfolio diligence pack prepared — ownership confirmation, assignment status, renewal currency, and any pending disputes — ahead of investor or acquirer review; licence agreements structured with correct royalty and GST treatment.IP ownership gaps discovered mid-diligence typically delay or reprice a transaction. Licence arrangements without correct GST invoicing on royalty payments create input tax credit and compliance exposure for both licensor and licensee.
Frequently asked
What is the difference between 'brand protection' and simply filing a trademark?

A single trademark filing protects one mark, in one or a few classes, under one statute. Brand protection is the broader strategic exercise of identifying every IP asset connected to your brand — names, logos, packaging artwork, product shapes, domains, social handles — and deciding which combination of trademark, copyright, and design protection, in which classes and jurisdictions, genuinely reflects your commercial footprint and risk. A business can hold a perfectly valid trademark registration and still have significant unprotected exposure if its packaging design, product shape, or key export markets were never considered.

Practitioner noteWe routinely meet founders who filed one trademark years ago, consider the job done, and are surprised to learn their product's distinctive shape or their commissioned packaging artwork was never separately protected. The portfolio conversation usually surfaces two or three gaps in the first meeting.
Do I need a trademark, a copyright, and a design registration — or just one of them?

It depends entirely on what you are protecting. A brand name or logo is protected by trademark. Original creative works — packaging artwork, website copy, software, marketing videos — are protected by copyright, which actually arises automatically on creation, though formal registration creates a valuable evidentiary record. A product's visual appearance — its shape, pattern, or ornamentation, separate from the brand name on it — is protected by design registration. Most consumer-facing brands genuinely need at least two of these, and product companies with distinctive packaging or product shapes typically need all three.

Practitioner noteThe most common gap we find in an audit is design registration — founders assume their branding is protected because the trademark is filed, without realising the product's physical shape or packaging silhouette is a separate, unprotected asset that a copycat can legally replicate as long as they use a different name.
We already have a few trademarks registered. What does a portfolio audit actually check?

We pull every registration and pending application connected to your brand and verify: the proprietor name matches your current company (not a founder's personal name or a since-renamed entity), the class coverage matches your actual and planned business activity, all upcoming renewal dates are captured correctly, no registration has lapsed or is approaching the non-use rectification threshold of 5 years and 3 months of non-use, and any copyright or design assets connected to the same brand have been considered alongside the trademarks.

Practitioner noteWe have found registrations still sitting in a founder's personal name three funding rounds later — completely unnoticed until an investor's diligence team flagged it. It is a straightforward fix, but far cheaper to catch in an audit than in a live term sheet negotiation.
Our trademark was filed by our previous designer/agency in their own name — how do we fix this?

This requires a formal assignment. For a trademark, the current registered proprietor executes an assignment deed transferring ownership to the company, which is then recorded with the Trade Marks Registry using Form TM-P. For copyright in creative work — a logo, packaging design, or website content created by an external designer — the designer holds copyright automatically unless a written assignment or work-for-hire agreement transferred it to you at the time of commissioning; if no such document exists, a retrospective assignment deed under Section 18 of the Copyright Act is needed now. Until this is done, the company using the brand does not legally own the underlying IP.

Practitioner noteThis is one of the most common issues we resolve for clients who engaged freelance designers or small agencies without a formal IP assignment clause in the engagement contract. We now recommend every client include an explicit IP assignment clause in any creative or development contract from Day 1, to avoid this retrospective fix altogether.
How many trademark classes should our brand file in?

This depends on your actual and planned commercial activity, not a fixed number. A single-product manufacturer typically needs the core goods class plus Class 35 if selling directly to consumers through retail or e-commerce. A brand operating across manufacturing, retail, and services may need three or four classes. Filing too narrowly leaves adjacent, commercially relevant classes open to a competitor; filing too broadly wastes government and professional fees on classes with no realistic business connection. We map this against your actual and planned business model rather than defaulting to a standard package.

Practitioner noteWe deliberately avoid recommending a flat number of classes to every client — the right number for a food manufacturer selling only wholesale is different from the right number for the same manufacturer also running branded retail outlets and an e-commerce store.
What are the current government fees for trademark filing as part of a portfolio strategy?

Government fees are charged per class of goods or services under the Trade Marks Rules 2017. For individuals, DPIIT-recognised startups, and Udyam-registered MSMEs: ₹4,500 per class for e-filing. For all other applicants (larger companies not registered as MSME or startup): ₹9,000 per class for e-filing. A portfolio covering, say, 3 classes for a startup applicant costs ₹13,500 in government fees; the same coverage for a non-MSME company costs ₹27,000. These are pass-through statutory fees; professional fees for search, strategy, filing coordination, and portfolio management are quoted separately.

Practitioner noteWe always confirm DPIIT or Udyam eligibility before filing, since it directly affects the government fee payable — and if a client is eligible but has not yet registered on Udyam, we complete that registration first since it is free and immediate.
Is copyright registration mandatory to have rights in our packaging artwork or website content?

No. Copyright in an original literary, artistic, or software work subsists automatically from the moment of creation under the Copyright Act 1957 — no registration is required to hold the right. Registration with the Copyright Office is not rights-creating; it is evidentiary — it creates an official, dated public record of authorship and ownership that is valuable in proving your case in an infringement dispute, and it is often required by e-commerce platforms and licensing counterparties as proof of ownership. For commercially important creative assets — signature packaging design, distinctive website or app content, proprietary software — registration is a low-cost step that materially strengthens your enforcement position later.

Practitioner noteClients are sometimes surprised that copyright registration is optional rather than mandatory. We recommend it selectively — for the creative assets that carry real commercial weight — rather than registering every piece of marketing content, which would not be a good use of the filing and professional fee budget.
Can a product's shape or packaging be protected separately from its brand name?

Yes — this is exactly what design registration under the Designs Act 2000 protects: the visual appearance (shape, configuration, pattern, or ornamentation) of a mass-produced article, entirely separate from the brand name or logo on it, which is protected by trademark. A competitor could use a completely different brand name on a product that copies your distinctive bottle shape or packaging silhouette, and if that shape is not separately registered as a design, your recourse is significantly weaker than if it were. Design registration requires the design to be new and not previously disclosed publicly for more than 12 months before filing — so timing matters.

Practitioner noteWe ask every consumer-product client early in the portfolio conversation whether their packaging or product shape has any distinctive, non-functional visual element — because the 12-month disclosure grace period means this decision has a real deadline, unlike trademark filing which has no such time pressure.
How does PNPC coordinate brand protection across India and the UAE?

Trademark, copyright, and design rights are territorial — an Indian registration does not protect you in the UAE and vice versa. PNPC's Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad offices handle the India-side portfolio, while our Dubai office coordinates UAE filings — either through direct national filing with the UAE Ministry of Economy or, since the UAE's accession to the Madrid Protocol in December 2021, through a single Madrid Protocol international application designating both jurisdictions from an Indian base filing. Both sides of the engagement are managed under one team with shared context on your business, rather than being split between an Indian trademark agent and a separate UAE law firm with no visibility into each other's work.

Practitioner noteThe value of single-team coordination becomes obvious the first time a UAE distributor or franchise partner asks for proof of registered brand ownership in the UAE — clients who engaged disconnected local agents in each country often cannot produce a coherent picture quickly, while ours can.
We are about to raise a funding round. What IP issues typically come up in diligence?

The most common findings are: trademarks or copyrights still held in a founder's or an external designer's personal name rather than the company, registrations that have lapsed or are approaching renewal without a tracking system, missing coverage in classes the company is now commercially active in, and no documented enforcement or monitoring practice despite known competitor activity. Any of these can slow a diligence process or become a negotiating point on valuation. We recommend a portfolio audit at least one funding cycle ahead of a planned raise, not during the diligence process itself.

Practitioner noteFixing an assignment gap under term-sheet time pressure is always more expensive and more stressful than fixing it proactively — the legal work is often identical, but the leverage and the timeline are completely different.
What happens if we discover a competitor is using a name or logo similar to ours?

The right response depends on where the competitor's mark stands. If it has been published in the Trade Marks Journal within the last 4 months and not yet registered, an opposition (Form TM-O) is the fastest route. If it has already registered, a rectification petition under Section 57 of the Trade Marks Act (heard by the Registrar or the Intellectual Property Division of the relevant High Court, following the abolition of the IPAB in 2021) is the applicable route, though it typically takes longer and has no fixed filing deadline for most grounds. If your mark is registered and theirs is simply unauthorised commercial use rather than a Registry filing, an infringement suit under Section 29, starting typically with a cease-and-desist letter, is the standard escalation path. We assess which route — or combination — fits the facts before recommending action.

Practitioner noteWe see clients occasionally take the most aggressive route (litigation) when a well-drafted cease-and-desist and, where applicable, a rectification petition would have achieved the same outcome at a fraction of the cost and time. Escalation should match the actual commercial stakes, not just the emotional reaction to discovering the infringement.
What is a trademark 'watch service' and is it included in portfolio management?

A watch service is ongoing monitoring of the weekly Trade Marks Journal, competitor filing activity, and (where relevant) marketplaces and domain registrars, to detect new applications or usage that conflict with your registered or pending marks — so you can act within the 4-month opposition window rather than discovering a conflict only after a competing mark has already registered. It is a core part of PNPC's portfolio management service for clients with an active, commercially valuable brand, rather than a one-off add-on.

Practitioner noteThe opposition window is unforgiving — once it closes on a conflicting mark, your only recourse is the slower and costlier rectification process. A watch service is inexpensive relative to that risk, particularly in high-filing-volume sectors like FMCG, apparel, and food and beverage.
Can we license our brand to a franchisee or distributor once it is registered?

Yes. A registered trademark (and copyright in associated creative works) can be licensed to a third party through a written licence or franchise agreement while you retain ownership. The licence can be recorded with the Trade Marks Registry as a registered user agreement, which, while not strictly mandatory for validity between the parties, strengthens the licensee's position in enforcement and quality-control matters. Royalty payments under such licences are subject to GST at the applicable rate under the current post-September-2025 rate structure, and the licence agreement should specify quality-control provisions, territory, exclusivity, and term to protect the value of the underlying mark.

Practitioner noteWe draft licence and franchise agreements alongside the underlying IP portfolio review specifically because a licence granted over an unclean or partially unregistered portfolio creates downstream problems for the licensee too — this is a frequent point of friction in franchise disputes we are asked to help resolve.
Our brand is well known regionally but we haven't registered a trademark yet — do we have any protection?

Yes, but it is materially weaker than registered protection. Unregistered use can support a 'passing off' claim under common law — you would need to prove goodwill/reputation in the mark, misrepresentation by the alleged infringer, and resulting damage, which is a heavier evidentiary burden than a straightforward registered-trademark infringement claim under Section 29 of the Trade Marks Act. India is also a first-to-file jurisdiction — a competitor or opportunist can file and register the same mark before you, after which you would be defending your unregistered use against their registered right, a materially harder position than filing first yourself.

Practitioner noteWe treat 'we've used this name for years, so we're protected' as a myth that needs correcting in almost every first conversation with a business that has delayed registration. Years of use builds goodwill for a passing-off claim, but it does not substitute for the certainty and stronger remedies that registration provides.
What is the Madrid Protocol and when is it worth using for our brand?

The Madrid Protocol is an international trademark filing system administered by WIPO that lets an applicant with a home-country (India) application or registration file a single international application designating multiple member countries, rather than filing separately in each one. India and the UAE are both members. It is generally cost-effective when you are designating five or more countries; for one or two target countries, direct national filing may be simpler and equally effective. Each designated country still examines the application under its own trademark law, so acceptance is not automatic across all designated territories.

Practitioner noteWe evaluate the Madrid route against direct filing on a case-by-case basis — it is a genuinely useful tool for broad expansion plans, but not automatically the cheaper or faster option for a business targeting only the UAE or one or two specific export markets.
How does PNPC price a brand protection and portfolio management engagement?

Government fees (trademark, design, copyright filing fees) are statutory pass-through costs quoted separately and transparently. Professional fees depend on the scope of the portfolio — the number of marks and classes, whether copyright and design filings are included, whether international filing is involved, and whether the engagement includes an audit of an existing portfolio with assignment clean-up. We provide a written, fixed-fee scope after the initial asset inventory and audit, before any filing work begins, so there are no surprise charges as the portfolio moves through examination, opposition, or renewal.

Practitioner noteWe deliberately do not quote a flat 'brand protection package' price upfront, because the genuine variation in scope — one trademark class versus a five-class, three-country, multi-instrument portfolio — makes a single number meaningless. What we commit to is a clear written quote before any filing commences.
What is the difference between rectification and cancellation of a trademark?

In Indian trademark law these are functionally the same statutory remedy under Section 57 of the Trade Marks Act 1999 — an application to the Registrar (or the Intellectual Property Division of the relevant High Court) to correct, cancel, or vary an entry on the Register, whether the ground is an outright error, a wrongful entry, or 5 years and 3 months of continuous non-use. 'Rectification' is the term used in the statute and covers both correcting a defective entry and removing it entirely; 'cancellation' is often used colloquially for the specific outcome of removing the mark from the Register altogether.

Practitioner noteWe use the statutory term 'rectification' in our filings and correspondence, since that is what the Registrar and courts refer to, but we explain the practical outcome — correction versus outright removal — in plain terms to clients unfamiliar with the distinction.
Does GST apply to the professional fees and licence royalties in a brand protection engagement?

Government filing fees paid to the Trade Marks Registry, Copyright Office, or Design Office are statutory fees and are not subject to GST. Professional fees charged by PNPC for search, strategy, filing coordination, and portfolio management are subject to GST at the applicable rate under the post-September-2025 GST rate structure. Royalty payments under a brand licensing or franchise arrangement are also subject to GST as a supply of services. PNPC issues GST-compliant invoices with government fees and professional fees on separate line items so clients can correctly claim input tax credit on the professional fee component.

Practitioner noteWe keep this separation explicit in every invoice — it matters both for correct input tax credit claims and for transparency about what portion of the cost is a statutory government fee versus a professional service charge.
What happens to our brand portfolio if the company is acquired or merges with another entity?

If the transaction is a share acquisition, the acquired company continues to own its IP portfolio without any separate transfer being required — the acquirer now owns the company that owns the assets. If it is an asset or business transfer (the brand is being carved out and sold separately from the corporate shell), every trademark, copyright, and design registration in the portfolio must be formally assigned to the acquiring entity — Form TM-P for trademarks, a written deed under Section 18 of the Copyright Act for copyright, and equivalent documentation for design registrations — and this should be a specific closing condition in the transaction documents, not an afterthought.

Practitioner noteWe flag IP portfolio assignment as a standing checklist item in every M&A engagement we support. In smaller deals in particular, IP is often not separately valued or tracked, and the assignment mechanics get missed until much later.
Should our brand protection strategy also cover trade secrets or proprietary processes?

Trade secrets — confidential business information, formulas, processes, or client data that derive value from not being publicly known — are not registrable under any Indian statute; there is no dedicated trade secrets law in India, unlike patents, trademarks, copyright, or designs. Protection instead comes from contractual mechanisms: non-disclosure agreements, confidentiality clauses in employment and vendor contracts, and internal access controls. Where a brand's value depends partly on a proprietary process or formula (a food recipe, a manufacturing technique), we recommend embedding these contractual protections as part of the wider IP and brand protection strategy, even though they sit outside the registrable-IP portfolio itself.

Practitioner noteWe routinely find that businesses with a genuinely valuable proprietary process have strong trademark protection but weak or nonexistent confidentiality agreements with the employees and contractors who actually know the process — a gap worth closing as part of a full brand protection review.
How often should we review our IP portfolio once it is fully registered?

We recommend a structured portfolio review at least once a year, and always ahead of any major business event — new product launch, new market entry, funding round, or licensing deal. An annual review checks renewal currency across every asset, confirms class coverage still matches actual business activity (which tends to expand faster than the original filing anticipated), and reviews any monitoring or enforcement activity from the preceding year. This is built into PNPC's ongoing portfolio management engagement rather than left for the client to remember.

Practitioner notePortfolios that are 'filed and forgotten' are the ones we most often find with expired renewals, personal-name registrations still unassigned years later, and class coverage that has fallen well behind the business's actual growth. An annual check catches these while they are still inexpensive to fix.
Is PNPC itself a registered trademark agent, copyright agent, or design agent?

PNPC Global is a Chartered Accountancy firm. Trademark filings are made through a registered trademark agent (registered under the Trade Marks Rules 2017), copyright filings through appropriately qualified copyright registration professionals, and design filings through a registered patent/design agent — with all of whom PNPC has an established, ongoing working relationship. PNPC's role is to design the overall brand protection strategy, coordinate the portfolio as a single engagement across all IP types and jurisdictions, integrate it with your corporate, tax, and compliance position, and manage the relationship with each specialist filing professional on your behalf — so you deal with one team and one point of contact throughout.

Practitioner noteWe are transparent about this division of roles from the first conversation: PNPC is the strategic and coordinating advisor across your full IP and business position; the actual Registry filings are executed by the appropriately licensed specialist professional for each IP type, working under PNPC's coordination.
What is the single most common brand protection mistake PNPC sees in new clients?

Treating trademark registration as the entire brand protection task and stopping there — while packaging artwork remains unregistered and copyright-unassigned from the original designer, the product's distinctive shape is unprotected, key domains or social handles are held in a founder's personal account rather than the company's, and no one is actively watching the Trade Marks Journal for conflicting filings. Each gap is inexpensive to close individually when caught early, and expensive to unwind once a dispute, funding round, or acquisition forces the issue.

Practitioner noteWe ask every new brand protection client the same first question: 'beyond the trademark, what else carries your brand's value — the packaging, the product shape, the domain, the social following?' The answer almost always reveals at least one unprotected asset.
We received a cease-and-desist letter claiming we are infringing someone else's trademark. What should we do?

Do not ignore it, and do not respond immediately without review. First, we verify whether the claimant's mark is actually registered (and in what class), whether your use predates theirs, and whether your marks are genuinely similar enough to cause likely confusion under the deceptive-similarity test the courts and Registry apply. Depending on that assessment, the response may range from a factual rebuttal (if your use predates theirs or the marks are not truly similar), to a negotiated coexistence or licensing arrangement, to a recommendation to rebrand if the claim is well-founded and the cost of a dispute would exceed the cost of a considered change.

Practitioner noteWe have seen businesses either capitulate immediately to a weak claim out of anxiety, or ignore a genuinely strong claim and let it escalate into litigation. Both are avoidable with an early, honest assessment of the actual legal merits rather than a reflexive reaction either way.
How does PNPC handle brand protection for a business that sells primarily through e-commerce marketplaces?

E-commerce platforms such as Amazon and Flipkart operate brand registry and IP-complaint programmes that require a valid trademark registration (and often a specific certificate or brand registry enrolment) before you can enforce against counterfeit listings, unauthorised sellers, or content hijacking on the platform. For marketplace-first brands, we prioritise Class 35 coverage (which specifically covers retail and marketplace-facing services) alongside the core product class, and build brand registry enrolment and ongoing marketplace monitoring into the portfolio management plan from the outset rather than as an afterthought once counterfeiting is already occurring.

Practitioner noteMarketplace brand registry enrolment is one of the more immediately practical benefits of registration for D2C and e-commerce clients — it directly unlocks faster takedown tools on the platforms where most of their commercial exposure actually occurs.
What ongoing reporting or updates does PNPC provide once the portfolio is set up?

Clients on an ongoing portfolio management engagement receive a consolidated status update covering: filing and examination status of any pending applications, renewal dates falling due in the coming period, any Journal or marketplace monitoring alerts requiring a decision, and a running record of all registered assets with their current status. This sits alongside — and is coordinated with — the client's broader compliance calendar with PNPC where the client also engages us for company secretarial, tax, or accounting services.

Practitioner noteFor clients who also use PNPC for annual company compliance, we deliberately keep the IP portfolio calendar in the same tracking system as MCA, GST, and tax deadlines — a single view of every date that matters to the business, rather than a separate IP-only tracker that gets checked less often.
Can a startup with limited budget still build a meaningful brand protection portfolio?

Yes — the sequencing matters more than doing everything at once. We typically recommend an early-stage startup start with a single word-mark trademark filing in the core class most central to the business (often at the reduced ₹4,500 per class DPIIT/Udyam fee), secure the primary domain and social handles in the company's name, and add copyright or design registration, additional classes, and international filing as the business scales and revenue justifies the additional spend. A phased portfolio plan, agreed upfront, avoids either overspending too early or leaving a genuine gap unaddressed indefinitely.

Practitioner noteWe build a phased roadmap for budget-constrained founders rather than either recommending everything at once or advising them to wait. The sequencing itself is a strategic decision, not just a cost-cutting compromise.
What is the difference between filing 'proposed to be used' versus claiming actual prior use on a trademark application?

Form TM-A allows the applicant to either declare an actual date of first use in commerce (supported by evidence such as invoices, packaging, or advertisements bearing that date) or to file on a 'proposed to be used' basis if the mark has not yet been used commercially. A mark filed with a genuine, evidenced prior-use date generally has a stronger priority position and a better footing in any later opposition or dispute, since it can point to a concrete date of market presence rather than only the filing date. Both are valid filing bases; the practical difference emerges if the mark's ownership or priority is later contested.

Practitioner noteWe ask new clients to preserve early evidence of use — even simple things like the first invoice bearing the brand name or the first packaging proof — because this evidence becomes valuable years later in a priority dispute, and it is often the hardest thing to reconstruct after the fact.
Does registering a trademark in India automatically protect us on global App Store or Play Store listings?

No. App marketplaces such as the Apple App Store and Google Play Store operate their own developer account and app-name policies, which are separate from any national trademark registry. An Indian trademark registration strengthens your position if you need to file a brand-dispute or impersonation complaint against another developer using a confusingly similar app name or icon, but it does not automatically reserve the name on these platforms — app names are still allocated on a first-registered, platform-specific basis, and a distinct app name search and registration strategy on each platform is a sensible addition to the wider IP portfolio for software and app-based brands.

Practitioner noteFor app-based clients, we specifically check app-store name availability alongside the trademark clearance search, since a clean trademark position does not by itself guarantee the app name is actually available for listing.
If we rebrand — change our company or product name — what happens to our existing IP portfolio?

A rebrand generally requires a fresh trademark clearance search and filing under the new name and/or logo — the old registration does not automatically transfer its rights to a new mark, even if the business itself is the same entity. The prior registration can usually be maintained (and eventually allowed to lapse or be surrendered) while the new mark works through its own filing and examination cycle, so there can be a transition period where both are technically live. Copyright in unchanged creative assets (illustrations, certain packaging elements not tied to the old name) generally continues without any new filing being required, but any artwork specific to the old brand name should be reviewed for continued relevance.

Practitioner noteWe plan rebrand-related filings well ahead of the public relaunch date wherever possible, since the clearance search and initial filing for the new mark should ideally be complete — or at least in progress with a protected priority date — before the new name is used publicly at scale.
What role does PNPC play if our IP dispute ends up in court rather than before the Registry?

PNPC's role in a full court proceeding — an infringement suit under Section 29 of the Trade Marks Act, a passing-off action, or a rectification petition before the Intellectual Property Division of a High Court — is coordination and advisory support alongside instructed IP litigation counsel, rather than appearing as counsel ourselves. We prepare the underlying documentary record (registration history, use evidence, prior correspondence, portfolio status), liaise with the litigation team on strategy that also accounts for the client's business and tax position, and remain the single point of contact for the client throughout, so the client is not managing multiple disconnected advisors during a stressful dispute.

Practitioner noteClients consistently tell us the biggest relief in a contested matter is having one team that understands both the legal proceeding and the underlying business, rather than needing to separately brief a litigation firm with no context on the company.
Our brand appears on packaging manufactured and sold only within one state. Do we still need a national trademark?

Trademark registration under the Trade Marks Act 1999 is a national right — an Indian trademark registration protects the mark across the whole of India, not just the state where the business currently operates, and there is no separate 'state-level' trademark registration. Even a business trading only in one state today benefits from national registration, both because expansion beyond the state is common as businesses grow, and because a national registration prevents a business in another state from later registering and using the same or a similar mark, which can create conflict if the original business eventually does expand.

Practitioner noteWe regularly see businesses that assumed a state-level registration exists — it does not. The trademark system in India has always been national in scope; only company name registration with the Registrar of Firms for unincorporated partnerships has any state-specific limitation, and that offers essentially no brand protection at all.
How does PNPC decide whether an infringement is worth pursuing, given that enforcement has a cost?

We assess the realistic commercial harm — lost sales, brand dilution, customer confusion evidence, and the scale of the infringer's operation — against the cost and time of each available remedy, from a cease-and-desist letter through to a full civil suit. A small, low-visibility, likely-to-stop-on-request infringer usually does not justify litigation; a large-scale or repeat infringer causing measurable commercial harm often does. We present this assessment plainly, including the realistic range of time and cost for each escalation option, so the client makes an informed commercial decision rather than an emotional one.

Practitioner noteNot every infringement is worth fighting, and we say so directly when that is our honest assessment — pursuing a low-stakes dispute can cost more in fees and management time than the harm it is meant to prevent.
Why PNPC Global
FeatureStandalone Trademark AgencyGeneric IP Law FirmPNPC Global (CA-Led Portfolio Strategy)
Scope of coverageTrademark filings only — copyright and design usually out of scopeFull IP coverage, but typically billed and managed as separate matters per instrumentTrademark, copyright, design, domain/handle, and enforcement coordinated as one portfolio
Integration with corporate and tax positionNone — trademark treated in isolation from company structure or taxLimited — IP advice generally does not extend into GST, FEMA, or corporate complianceIP assignment, licensing GST treatment, FEMA/FDI diligence readiness, and MCA compliance calendar handled by the same team
Portfolio-level strategyReactive — files what is requested, class by classAvailable, but often quoted and delivered per matter rather than as a standing strategyProactive class, jurisdiction, and instrument strategy reviewed and updated as the business grows
Cross-border India–UAE coordinationRare — most agencies are India-only or handle referrals with limited context sharingAvailable at larger firms, at a correspondingly higher fee structurePNPC's Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai offices coordinate India and UAE filings under one engagement
Diligence readiness for funding/M&ANot typically assessed unless specifically instructedAssessed if instructed as a discrete diligence exerciseBuilt into the ongoing portfolio management relationship, so gaps are caught before a term sheet, not during one
Renewal and monitoring disciplineReminder emails; execution depends on the individual agency's systemsGenerally reliable at larger firms with dedicated IP-docketing systemsSingle compliance calendar covering trademark, design, and domain renewals alongside the client's tax and corporate deadlines
Continuity over the portfolio's lifeRisk of discontinuity if the agency is unresponsive or the relationship lapsesStrong within the engagement, but IP work is often siloed from the client's other advisorsOne CA-led team with full context on the business across IP, tax, and corporate matters for the life of the relationship

What the PNPC package includes

  1. 01

    Full brand and IP asset inventory across trademarks, copyright works, designs, domains, and social handles

  2. 02

    Portfolio gap audit for existing registrations — proprietor names, class coverage, renewal currency, and assignment status

  3. 03

    Nice Class and jurisdiction strategy aligned to your actual and planned commercial footprint

  4. 04

    Trademark search, clearance, and Form TM-A filing through a registered trademark agent, in India and (via Madrid Protocol or direct filing) the UAE

  5. 05

    Copyright registration coordination for commercially significant creative assets — packaging artwork, website/app content, software

  6. 06

    Design registration coordination for distinctive product shapes, packaging, and ornamentation under the Designs Act 2000

  7. 07

    IP assignment clean-up — moving personal-name trademark filings and unassigned designer copyrights into the company's ownership

  8. 08

    Domain and social handle audit and consolidation under company control

  9. 09

    First Examination Report response drafting and representation at Registry Hearings across trademark, copyright, and design matters

  10. 10

    Trade Marks Journal and marketplace monitoring (watch service) for conflicting or infringing use

  11. 11

    Opposition, rectification, cease-and-desist, and infringement-suit coordination, including with IP litigation counsel where required

  12. 12

    Licence and franchise agreement structuring with correct royalty GST treatment

  13. 13

    Single consolidated renewal and compliance calendar spanning the full IP portfolio alongside your broader tax and corporate obligations

  14. 14

    IP diligence readiness pack for funding rounds, licensing deals, and M&A transactions

Speak with a PNPC Chartered Accountant about building or auditing your brand's IP portfolio. We will map every asset that carries your brand's commercial value, flag the gaps that matter most, and give you a clear, honestly scoped plan before any filing begins.

← Back to IPR
Talk to a CA