Hiring Guide
Intellectual property is often a company's most valuable asset — and one of the most frequently neglected until it's too late. The USPTO processed more than 600,000 patent applications in fiscal year 2023, and data consistently shows that applicants who attempt to prosecute their own patents without professional representation have significantly lower allowance rates than those represented by registered patent practitioners. The pattern is similar in trademark prosecution: unrepresented applicants face higher rates of office action, refusal, and abandonment. IP law encompasses four distinct areas — patents, trademarks, copyrights, and trade secrets — each with different legal frameworks, different prosecution and enforcement strategies, and different types of attorney expertise. A patent attorney focused on biotech prosecution has a fundamentally different skill set from a trademark attorney who primarily handles brand clearance and prosecution for consumer goods companies. Even within patents, mechanical, electrical, software, and biotech specialties require different technical backgrounds and different knowledge of applicable case law. Beyond the legal mechanics, the most valuable IP attorneys bring a business perspective: they help you prioritize which IP to pursue, understand the competitive landscape, make build-versus-license-versus-acquire decisions, and structure IP strategy in a way that supports your business goals rather than generating an IP portfolio for its own sake. This guide helps you find an IP attorney with the right combination of technical expertise, prosecution experience, and business judgment for your situation.
Use these in an intro call or first session to quickly assess fit and expertise.
1.Are you registered to practice before the USPTO, and what is your technical background relative to our invention or industry?
Why it matters: USPTO registration is a prerequisite for patent prosecution — it is separate from law school and bar admission and requires both a scientific or engineering degree and passage of the patent bar exam. The technical background requirement exists because effective patent drafting requires genuine understanding of the technology being claimed. An attorney who cannot clearly describe their technical background and explain why it is relevant to your specific invention area may not have the expertise to draft claims that provide meaningful protection.
2.What is your prosecution track record in our technology area — specifically, what is your typical allowance rate and how many office actions do you typically encounter?
Why it matters: Prosecution track record is the most direct measure of an attorney's effectiveness at claim drafting. Attorneys who draft strong, well-supported claims with clear distinctions from prior art tend to encounter fewer rejections and obtain broader, more defensible patents. Allowance rates and the number of rounds of examination are imperfect but meaningful proxies for drafting quality. Attorneys who are unable or unwilling to share this data may not have tracked it — which itself reveals something about their practice management.
3.Looking at what we've shared about our technology and business, what IP strategy would you recommend, and what would you prioritize first?
Why it matters: This question tests the attorney's business judgment alongside their legal expertise. Strong IP counsel can quickly identify which aspects of your technology are most protectable, which competitive risks are most significant, and how to sequence an IP program given your resources and timeline. Attorneys who respond with a comprehensive list of applications to file without prioritizing may be optimizing for billable work rather than your strategic interests.
4.Have you been involved in any IP disputes or enforcement matters in our technology area, and what was the outcome?
Why it matters: IP prosecution and IP litigation require different expertise, but attorneys who have been involved in litigation or inter partes review proceedings have a materially different understanding of how patents are evaluated and challenged in adversarial settings. This experience informs how they draft claims with litigation in mind — writing claims that will hold up to validity challenges, not just pass examination. Knowing their dispute experience tells you whether their prosecution work is informed by how patents get tested in practice.
5.What does your process look like for drafting a patent application — specifically, how do you ensure you're capturing everything that matters?
Why it matters: The quality of a patent is largely determined by the quality of the invention disclosure interview and the thoroughness of the claim drafting process. Attorneys who have a structured process for extracting the full scope of an invention — understanding not just the preferred embodiment but the full range of alternatives, the inventive step relative to prior art, and the commercial embodiments that need protection — consistently produce stronger patents than those who work from a brief written summary.
6.How do you think about claim scope — and how do you balance breadth of protection against the risk of rejection or invalidity?
Why it matters: Claim scope is the central strategic question in patent prosecution. Overly narrow claims are easy to design around and provide limited competitive protection; overly broad claims invite rejection during prosecution and invalidity challenges later. Understanding how an attorney thinks about this tradeoff — and how they calibrate it given the prior art landscape in your field — reveals both their technical judgment and their understanding of what makes a patent commercially valuable versus merely granted.
7.What are the most important IP risks we should be aware of from a freedom-to-operate standpoint — are there existing patents we should be concerned about?
Why it matters: Freedom-to-operate analysis — assessing whether your product or process infringes existing third-party patents — is as important as building your own IP portfolio. Advisors who proactively raise FTO concerns, and can describe how to conduct or commission an FTO analysis in your technology space, are thinking comprehensively about your IP risk profile. Those who focus exclusively on prosecution without surfacing FTO questions may be leaving a significant risk unaddressed.
8.What does it cost to maintain an IP program like the one you're recommending, and how should we think about the ROI of each piece?
Why it matters: IP prosecution and maintenance fees accumulate significantly over time — especially across international jurisdictions. An attorney who can clearly articulate the ongoing cost of the portfolio they're recommending, and connect each piece to a specific competitive or commercial benefit, is helping you make informed investment decisions. Advisors who recommend comprehensive protection without engaging seriously with cost or ROI may not be exercising the prioritization judgment your budget requires.
IP consulting sessions begin with an assessment of what you've built and what you want to protect. Your expert will review your situation, explain which IP protections apply, identify gaps in your current coverage, and give you a prioritized action plan. Expect clear explanations of complex topics — and honest advice on where investing in IP protection makes financial sense.
Provisional Patent Application
A provisional patent application is a lower-cost filing that establishes a 'patent pending' status for 12 months, giving inventors time to develop and test their invention before committing to a full patent application.
Trade Secret
A trade secret is confidential business information — formulas, processes, designs, customer lists, or algorithms — that provides a competitive advantage and is protected as long as it remains secret.
IP Assignment Agreement
An IP assignment agreement is a legal document that transfers ownership of intellectual property — code, inventions, designs, or creative works — from the creator to the company.
Fair Use
Fair use is a legal doctrine in US copyright law that allows limited use of copyrighted material without permission — for purposes such as commentary, criticism, education, news reporting, and parody. Whether a use qualifies as fair use depends on a four-factor balancing test applied case by case.
Trade Dress
Trade dress refers to the overall visual appearance and image of a product or business — including packaging design, color scheme, shape, or décor — that identifies its source and distinguishes it from competitors. Trade dress can be protected under trademark law without federal registration if it is distinctive and non-functional.