We begin with a detailed discussion to understand your intellectual property assets—whether they involve trademarks, patents, copyrights, or trade secrets. This step allows us to identify your goals and assess any immediate risks.
Our team of patent attorneys and lawyers review your existing IP portfolio and supporting documentation to evaluate protection levels and compliance. We then develop a tailored strategy to safeguard your creations and maximize commercial value.
Once you approve the proposed approach, we formalize our engagement by outlining the scope of work, timelines, and fees. This step ensures transparency and gives you confidence that your IP is in expert hands.
We implement the agreed strategy by filing applications, managing registrations, and enforcing your rights against infringement. Our team also handles negotiations and disputes to protect your interests.
Intellectual property requires continuous oversight. We provide ongoing support to monitor renewals, update registrations, and adapt your strategy as your business evolves.
We conduct comprehensive searches to identify conflicts and assess registrability. Our advice includes practical risk ratings, competitor analysis, and strategies for mitigating exposure before launch.
We design tailored filing programs that prioritise classes aligned with your goods/services, manage priority claims for international filings, and implement portfolio audits to keep registrations current. We also handle assignments, renewals, and ownership transfers seamlessly.
We represent clients in trade mark oppositions and removal actions, prepare evidence of use, and negotiate settlements where appropriate. Our enforcement approach includes cease‑and‑desist letters, coexistence agreements, and litigation strategies that protect brand equity without unnecessary escalation.
We review and correct ownership gaps across creative works, software, and marketing assets, drafting assignments, consents, and moral rights waivers to ensure enforceability. This includes agency agreements, influencer contracts, and collaborative projects.
We structure licences for publishers, streaming platforms, and digital content providers, covering exclusivity, royalties, sublicensing rights, and quality control. Our goal is to monetise IP while maintaining brand integrity and compliance.
We manage infringement on social media, marketplaces, and hosting platforms, issuing DMCA notices, liaising with platform compliance teams, and escalating to urgent relief where takedowns fail. We also advise on proactive monitoring tools to detect misuse early.
We draft and negotiate SaaS agreements, subscription terms, and enterprise licences, addressing IP ownership, uptime/service levels, security obligations, audit rights, and termination triggers. Our templates are scalable and tailored to your delivery model.
We audit OSS dependencies, assess licence obligations (GPL, MIT, Apache), and implement internal policies to prevent inadvertent IP leakage. We also train teams on compliance and risk mitigation for hybrid codebases.
We establish escrow arrangements for mission‑critical software, define audit protocols for license compliance, and manage breach responses, protecting continuity and reducing exposure in high‑value technology deals.
Our patent attorneys assess patentability, draft specifications, and file applications. For designs, they manage filings for product aesthetics and advise on enforcement strategies against copycat products.
We prepare R&D collaboration agreements, technology transfer deals, and licensing frameworks—defining contributions, milestones, exclusivity, and revenue sharing with clarity and enforceability.
We audit innovation pipelines and existing filings, prioritising assets with genuine commercial leverage. Our advice includes cost‑benefit analysis and strategies for maintaining competitive advantage in key markets.
We conduct detailed infringement assessments, examining similarity, market context, and consumer perception, then gather proof through dated records, packaging, and expert reports.
We pursue injunctions, search orders, and freezing orders where necessary, and implement platform takedowns and customs border measures to stem harm quickly.
We design coexistence agreements, undertakings, and staged rebrands where pragmatic, protecting your position while avoiding costly litigation. Our approach balances firmness with commercial sense.
We draft NDAs and confidentiality clauses that reflect real‑world workflows, covering multi‑party collaborations, vendor access, and digital security obligations.
We implement IP assignment clauses, post‑employment restraints, and exit protocols to prevent leakage of know‑how and proprietary code, especially in high‑turnover environments.
When breaches occur, we act fast, preserving evidence, issuing urgent demands, negotiating undertakings, and seeking court relief where necessary. We also design remediation plans to restore security and trust.
Generally, to advertise what your trade mark is, you can use the ™ symbol after your trade mark at any point in time in any country. Using the ™ symbol helps the public recognise and remember your business.
In order to protect your design in Australia, an application must be filed with the local government body, IP Australia. This application is typically prepared by a patent attorney using illustrations of your design.
You can only use the ® symbol once your trade mark is registered and in the country that your trade mark is registered.
You can use the symbol if your trade mark is registered overseas and not in Australia, however you are required to show the country of registration close to it.
Although it is legal to use the TM symbol without registration, it is an offense if the ® symbol is used without a registered trade mark. The Australian Federal Police, Customs Border Patrol or Intellectual Property Specialists deal with infringements of this nature and can be utilised if you require legal aid in such circumstances.
Once your trade mark is registered you are legally able to enforce your trade mark rights and actively stop others from using your trade mark and trade marks that are deceptively similar to your registered trade mark.
Without trade mark registration, you are vulnerable to other businesses using your trade mark to see their goods and services.
Seeking legal advice through an Intellectual Property Specialist is a highly effective way of understanding your trade mark and remaining in the know about the status of your intellectual property.
Firstly, a patent is drafted by a Patent Attorney. Once drafted, the patent is then filed online with IP Australia.
There are three main types of patent applications that can be file in Australia:
The type of patent application you require will depend on a number of factors. Speaking to a Patent Attorney is recommended to determine which patent application is best suited for you. Chamberlains’ Patent Attorneys are able to determine the right patent application for you, as well as draft and file the application on your behalf.
A business name and domain don’t grant exclusive rights. A registered trade mark provides legal protection for your brand.
“™” can be used with unregistered marks; “®” indicates a registered trade mark. Misusing “®” can create legal issues, use it only once registration is granted.
Often yes, if they distinguish your goods/services. We assess distinctiveness and prepare filings that maximise registrability.
Not always. Employees generally vest ownership in the employer, but contractors and agencies require written assignments. We fix chain‑of‑title.
Combine copyright (for code), trade secrets (for know‑how), contracts (licensing/NDAs), and, where applicable, patents for technical inventions.
OSS is powerful but licence terms matter. We review dependencies and usage to avoid unintended sharing of proprietary code or IP.
Use evidence‑based letters, platform takedowns, coexistence options, and staged undertakings. We escalate only if proportionate and necessary.
Yes, via coordinated filings and treaty mechanisms. We prioritise markets based on risk and revenue, then stage filings to manage cost.
Timeframes vary by jurisdiction, but protection often starts from the priority date of your application. We set realistic milestones, manage examiner queries, and use fast‑track options where available.
Yes, ensure licences/assignments and moral rights consents cover your use cases (edits, attribution, territory, platforms).
Creation dates, drafts, investment records, first‑use dates, packaging, invoices, campaign assets, and witness statements, proof builds leverage.
Often. Negotiation, mediation, and clear undertakings resolve most matters faster and cheaper while protecting relationships and brand equity.
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