Why protecting your trademark is now essential to business success
Johannesburg, South Africa – 22 January 2026 – As digitalisation accelerates, trademarks have shifted from a traditional legal requirement to a critical commercial asset, one that directly influences digital trust, customer acquisition, and long-term enterprise value. This is the view of Grant Christianson, Group Legal Advisor and Company Secretary at e4, who says the online environment has fundamentally changed how businesses must think about brand protection.
“Being online has become inseparable from brand identity,” says Christianson. “Digital channels expose businesses to risks that didn’t readily exist a decade ago, from impersonation to AI-generated misuse and domain-based fraud. Simply registering a trademark is no longer enough, companies must manage and enforce trademarks proactively.”
Digitalisation expands trademark exposure
While many South African businesses register their trademarks, fewer recognise the breadth of digital risks that now accompany them. Threats such as cybersquatting, social-media impersonation, brand keyword hijacking and marketplace counterfeiting are becoming increasingly common. AI has added another layer of complexity, with models capable of unintentionally generating content or imagery that mimics existing trademarks.
Christianson says early digital alignment is now essential. This includes securing relevant domain names, reserving matching social-media handles, and using trademark symbols consistently across websites, mobile apps and digital advertising.
SA’s legal framework — and its digital extension
Trademarks are governed by the Trade Marks Act of 1993 and administered by the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC). Registration provides exclusive rights to use that mark for specific goods and services. However, Christianson notes that modern enforcement extends beyond traditional legislation.
“Online trademark protection is strengthened by additional safeguards such as the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act and the .ZA Domain Name Dispute Resolution Regulations,” he says. “Platform takedown mechanisms also play a crucial role, from marketplaces to app stores and social platforms. Digital enforcement must now be part of every brand’s strategy.”
Building a strong digital-ready trademark
Creating a trademark that can thrive in the digital world requires more than a compelling name or visual. Distinctiveness remains key, with coined and arbitrary names offering the strongest protection. However, brands must also consider future digital environments, from mobile interfaces to algorithmically rendered logos.
Searchability and AI visibility are increasingly important, ensuring that the brand is memorable to humans and distinguishable to machine-learning models.
Protection continues after registration
Registering a trademark marks the start, not the end, of digital brand stewardship. Christianson recommends consistent trademark use across all customer-facing platforms; embedded notices on websites and apps; trademark clauses in software agreements; and monitoring tools that track new domain registrations, marketplace listings and logo similarities. Internally, brand-use protocols help ensure trademarks are applied correctly across teams.
“A trademark is a living asset,” he says. “If it isn’t monitored and defended, its value erodes, particularly in digital spaces where imitation is fast and inexpensive.”
A commercial asset with tangible value
Beyond protection, trademarks increasingly form part of a company’s commercial strategy. Registered marks can be licensed, franchised, used as collateral, factored into valuations and expanded internationally through the Madrid Protocol. In digital-first sectors, the brand itself often becomes a key competitive differentiator.
Strengthening trademark strategy
Christianson advises businesses to conduct thorough pre-filing searches, file early through CIPC or an IP attorney, use trademark symbols appropriately, and monitor continuously for digital misuse. He adds that filings should align with technology roadmaps, product plans and digital expansion strategies.
“Whether launching a new platform or expanding into new markets, trademark protection is one of the earliest strategic decisions businesses should make,” he concludes. “It protects innovation, defends reputation, and ensures your brand remains uniquely, and recognisably, yours.”
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