Seven Deadly Legal Mistakes In Protecting Your Brand, Trademarks & LOGOS
Shield Your Business Name, Identity & Reputation--Without Going to Law School
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Shield Your Business Name, Identity & Reputation — Without Going to Law School
by Brett Bacon, Esq. (over thirty years of experience as an attorney-at-law)
You chose your business name carefully.
You built a logo.
You secured a domain.
You opened social media accounts.
You registered your LLC.
So your brand is protected… right?
Not necessarily.
In today’s online marketplace, brand exposure expands quickly. A local business can begin selling nationwide within weeks. Amazon listings, Etsy shops, Shopify stores, subscription models, digital courses, and social media campaigns can push your name into markets you never anticipated.
And that is where risk quietly begins.
Most brand problems do not arise from bad intent.
They arise from an assumption.
Assuming state registration protects you nationally.
Assuming a Google search confirms availability.
Assuming you can file a trademark later.
Assuming copycats are harmless.
Assuming registration is permanent without maintenance.
Assuming brand protection is an expense rather than an asset.
When those assumptions go unexamined, the law fills in the blanks.
In this volume of the bestselling Seven Deadly Legal Mistakes Series, business attorney Brett Bacon examines the most common legal mistakes small business owners make when protecting their brand, trademarks, and logos, including:
• Believing that registering your business name means you own it everywhere
• Skipping proper trademark searches before investing in branding
• Waiting too long to file a federal trademark
• Protecting the name but ignoring logos, taglines, and product lines
• Ignoring online copycats and marketplace infringement
• Failing to use and maintain a registered trademark properly
• Treating trademark protection as a cost instead of a long-term asset strategy
These mistakes occur in:
Brick-and-mortar businesses expanding online
Amazon, Etsy, and Shopify sellers
Subscription-based businesses
Consultants and course creators
Family-owned companies
Local retailers shipping nationwide
Entrepreneurs building scalable brands
Written in plain English, this book does not teach trademark theory or overwhelm you with technical statutes. Instead, it focuses on how brand risk actually develops in real businesses—quietly, gradually, and often during periods of growth.
Each chapter breaks down one deadly mistake, explains the governing legal principle, shows how it plays out in practice, and provides practical steps and checklists you can use immediately.
This is not a law school textbook.
It is not fear-based legal marketing.
And it is not written to sell legal services.
It is a practical guide designed to help you:
Protect your brand identity
Strengthen your negotiating position
Avoid forced rebranding
Recognize risk before expansion
Build long-term brand value intentionally
Your brand is more than a name.
It is your reputation in the marketplace.
Before you invest heavily in growth, advertising, packaging, or national expansion, it is worth asking a simple question:
Do you legally own what you are building?
About the Author
Brett Bacon, Esq. is a licensed attorney and entrepreneur with more than three decades of experience working at the intersection of law and business. He has advised business owners, executives, and founders on the legal realities of building, operating, structuring, buying, selling, and protecting closely held businesses under real-world conditions.
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