What Does a Patent Attorney Do? A Step-by-Step Breakdown for First-Time Inventors



A patent attorney manages the legal process of securing exclusive rights to your invention. This covers everything from conducting a prior art search and drafting the application to arguing your case before the USPTO and protecting your rights after the patent issues. If you have an original idea and want to know what happens between “I invented something” and “I have a patent,” this walkthrough is for you.

What You Are Hiring?

Most people search for a patent attorney because they are unfamiliar with the process. That is a perfectly reasonable place to start. The gap between having an idea and holding a granted patent is filled with legal strategy, technical language, and procedural steps that are hard to see from the outside.

A patent attorney bridges that gap by learning your invention, evaluating its position in the existing field, and building a legal strategy around it. The sections below walk through exactly what that process looks like, step by step, in plain language.

Stage 1: The Free Consultation

What happens at a first patent attorney consultation?

The process starts with a conversation. At Parsons & Goltry, that conversation is free. During the initial consultation, the attorney learns the details of your invention: what it does, how it works, what problem it solves, and what makes it different from anything already available. A finished prototype is welcome, though a clear description of the idea is all that is needed to begin.

This is a diagnostic conversation. The attorney assesses whether your invention is likely patentable, what type of patent protection fits your situation, and what a realistic path forward looks like. You leave with a clearer picture of your options.

At Parsons & Goltry, every initial consultation is handled personally by a partner. The first person who evaluates your invention is an experienced patent attorney, and that standard carries through the entire process.

Stage 2: The Patent Search

Why does a patent attorney search before filing?

Before a single word of your application is drafted, your attorney conducts a thorough patent search to identify prior art. Prior art refers to existing patents, published applications, academic papers, or other public disclosures related to your invention. Knowing what is already on record before filing protects you from wasted fees and weakened claims.

Finding prior art early leads to smarter filing. Understanding what is already patented helps your attorney define the boundaries of your invention and write claims that are legally defensible and as broad as possible. At Parsons & Goltry, the patent search is a strategic step that shapes the entire application to follow.

Stage 3: Drafting the Patent Application

What does a patent attorney write in a patent application?

A patent application is a legal document, a technical document, and a strategic document all at once. It must describe your invention clearly, define its boundaries precisely, and hold up under scrutiny from a USPTO examiner. The quality of the drafting has a lasting impact on the protection you receive.

There are three main types of patent applications:

  • Utility patent — Protects how an invention works, is used, or is made. This is the most common type for new products and processes.
  • Design patent — Protects the ornamental appearance of an invention, covering its shape, visual configuration, or surface design.
  • Provisional application — Establishes an early filing date and allows use of the phrase “patent pending,” giving inventors 12 months to file a complete application.

The claims section is the most critical part of any application. Claims define the legal boundaries of your protection. Claims written too narrowly leave room for competitors to work around your patent. Claims written with the right scope hold up and protect what you have created.

Parsons & Goltry drafts every application from scratch. The attorneys go deep into your industry and your specific invention to build claims that protect your work with the broadest protection your invention supports.

Stage 4: Filing and USPTO Prosecution

What happens after a patent application is filed?

Once your application is submitted to the USPTO, it enters the examination queue. A patent examiner with technical expertise in your invention’s field reviews your application against the prior art and the legal requirements for patentability. This process takes one to three years, depending on the technology area and the current examination backlog.

An initial rejection is a normal part of the process. Most applications receive what is called an Office Action, a written response from the examiner raising objections based on prior art or claim language. This is the beginning of a back-and-forth process called patent prosecution, and experienced patent attorneys are prepared for every stage of it.

Your attorney responds to each Office Action by addressing the examiner’s concerns, clarifying claims where needed, and working toward the broadest protection your invention supports. Parsons & Goltry responds to every Office Action with that goal in mind. Filing the application is the beginning of the work, and prosecution is where the strategy is put into action.

Stage 5: After the Patent Issues

Does a patent attorney’s job end when the patent is granted?

A granted patent is a business asset, and like any asset, it calls for ongoing attention. Patents have maintenance fees due at regular intervals. As your business grows, your IP portfolio may grow with it. When questions arise about enforcing your rights or filing additional patents on improvements, the right support makes a difference.

At Parsons & Goltry, the relationship continues after your patent issues. The same partners who handled your application remain available for strategy discussions, portfolio guidance, and whatever comes next in your journey as an inventor. The patent is the foundation, and we are here to help you build on it.

Ready to See How This Works for Your Idea?

The next step is a conversation. At Parsons & Goltry, that first conversation is free, confidential, and handled personally by a partner. You will leave with a clear sense of whether your invention is patentable, what type of protection fits your situation, and what the process would look like from here.

Schedule your free consultation at patentsavers.com.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a patent attorney, and what do they do? 

A patent attorney is a licensed legal professional who specializes in securing patent protection for inventions. They conduct prior art searches, draft patent applications, and represent inventors before the USPTO throughout the examination process. They also provide strategic advice on how to protect and grow intellectual property as a business asset.

How do inventors know whether to hire a patent attorney or file on their own? 

Inventors may file patents without an attorney, though the quality of the application determines the strength of the protection received. Most inventors who file without professional help end up with narrower protection. A patent attorney works to secure the broadest, most defensible protection possible.

How much does a patent attorney cost? 

Fees vary depending on the complexity of the invention and the type of application. A utility patent application generally requires a higher investment. Parsons & Goltry offers a free initial consultation so inventors can understand the process and estimated costs before making any commitment.

What is prior art, and why does it matter for a patent? 

Prior art refers to any publicly available information that existed before your invention was filed, including existing patents, published applications, and public disclosures. Identifying prior art early allows your attorney to draft claims that protect what is genuinely novel about your idea. At Parsons & Goltry, the prior art search shapes the entire application strategy.

What is the difference between a utility patent and a design patent? 

A utility patent protects how an invention works, is used, or is manufactured. A design patent protects the ornamental appearance of an object, covering its shape or visual configuration. Many inventions qualify for both, and a patent attorney can advise on whether pursuing one or both types of protection makes strategic sense.

What is a provisional patent application? 

A provisional patent application is a preliminary filing that establishes an early filing date and allows inventors to use the term “patent pending.” It is reviewed after a full non-provisional application is filed within 12 months. It gives inventors time to develop their invention further before committing to a complete application.

What is an Office Action from the USPTO? 

An Office Action is a written communication from a USPTO patent examiner raising objections or rejections to a patent application. It is a standard and expected part of the process, and most applications receive at least one. Your patent attorney responds to Office Actions by addressing the examiner’s concerns and working toward the broadest possible protection.

How long does it take to get a patent? 

Utility patents generally take one to three years from filing to grant, depending on the technology area and USPTO workload. Provisional applications can be filed quickly and must be followed by a full application within 12 months. A patent attorney can provide a realistic estimate based on your specific invention and the current examination timeline.

What happens to a patent after it is granted? 

A granted patent gives the inventor the right to exclude others from making, using, or selling the invention for the life of the patent. Maintenance fees are due at regular intervals to keep the patent active. When infringement occurs, a patent attorney can help evaluate the available legal options.

What should inventors bring to a first patent attorney consultation? 

A clear description of the invention and what makes it different from existing products is enough to get started. Notes, sketches, or any documentation of when and how the idea was developed can also be helpful. The goal of the first consultation is for the attorney to understand the invention well enough to give an honest assessment of the path forward.


Client Approved

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"Our company has worked with a number of patent attorneys and were so pleased when we began working with Parsons & Goltry nearly a decade ago. Mike Goltry's knowledge and attention to detail has enabled us to have numerous products patented and trademarks registered. We highly recommend this Law Firm."

- Sharon K.

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"Michael Goltry is the most professional, honest and effective patent attorney whom I ever met in my 40 year professional engineering career. I started to work with him over 20 years ago and plan to work indefinitely."

- Zoltan Kemeny, PhD, Struct. Eng.

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"Mr. Goltry took a provisional patent that we'd filed ourselves, and quickly and professionally turned our innovation into U.S. and foreign applications. His [patent claims] were a thing of beauty, and I was amazed by how deftly he countered the inevitable office actions. His language held up, and the U.S. Patent just issued. He was easy and efficient to work with, and his fees were remarkably reasonable. We're not planning to go anywhere else, ever."

- Ski Milburn, CEO, Victori, LLC

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"I applied for a patent through Parsons & Goltry. After being on the docket for 2 years at the USPTO, I received notification that my patent request had been denied. Michael Goltry contacted me immediately to review my options. After I informed him of my decision to move forward, he filed a response to the USPTO. In his response he got the examiner to fully understand the claims in the patent application and the "denied" decision was reversed. I was able to secure and receive a "patent granted" decision. Thank you, Michael Goltry."

- Kathy H., Inventor

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