What are trade secrets and why should companies protect them?
Trade secrets are a form of intellectual property that give a company a competitive advantage because they are not publicly known. They can include proprietary information such as formulas, algorithms, manufacturing methods, customer lists, pricing models, supplier relationships, or other know-how that would be valuable to competitors.
Unlike patents, trade secrets are not registered with a government agency. Their protection depends entirely on the company’s ability to secure confidential information and prove that it has taken reasonable steps to keep it secret.
If a trade secret is lost—whether through employee turnover, data leakage, or an NDA violation—its value can disappear instantly, and the legal right to enforce it may vanish as well.
What counts as a trade secret?
In the United States, trade secrets are defined under both state and federal law, including the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (UTSA) and the Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA). To qualify, information must:
- Not be generally known or readily discoverable
- Provide economic value because it is secret
- Be subject to reasonable measures to maintain secrecy
This can include:
- Technical information such as code, designs, and manufacturing processes
- Business information such as customer data, pricing, or marketing plans
- Scientific data or research results
- Supply chain and vendor strategies
A trade secret audit is one of the most effective ways to identify and document these assets.
Why protect trade secrets?
The protection of intellectual property rights is critical to maintaining competitive advantage.
When trade secrets are properly safeguarded, companies can:
- Prevent competitors from replicating proprietary information
- Maintain higher margins by protecting pricing or production advantages
- Increase valuation and investor confidence through defensible IP
- Avoid costly disputes like the Waymo Uber trade secret case
- Protect innovation that cannot or should not be patented
In many cases, patents do not work for certain innovations because they require public disclosure. Keeping valuable know-how as a trade secret can provide protection for as long as it remains confidential.
How to protect trade secrets
Protecting know-how and sensitive information requires more than just an NDA or non-disclosure document. A strong trade secret program should include:
Access controls: Limit access to those who need to know and regularly review permissions
Legal agreements: Use NDAs, non-compete agreements, and clear disclosure of agreement terms with employees, vendors, and partners
Training: Ensure employees understand what is confidential and how to protect
Documentation: Keep records of policies, signed agreements, and compliance measures for legal enforceability
Monitoring: Watch for unusual activity, third-party risk, or compliance issues
Incident response: Have a plan to investigate and address suspected breaches quickly
Modern solutions, including AI for intellectual property, can help companies detect potential threats, conduct audits, and ensure ongoing compliance with trade secret protection requirements.
Trade secrets and your overall IP strategy
Trade secrets are one part of a holistic IP portfolio, alongside patents, trademarks, and copyrights. For example, you may decide to patent a product that is easy to reverse engineer while keeping complex algorithms as trade secrets. Balancing patent protection with how to protect innovation through secrecy helps ensure you are covering both short-term and long-term risks.
How Tangibly can help
Tangibly was purpose built to help companies protect trade secrets, manage proprietary information, and reduce intellectual property risk. Our IP management platform combines legal expertise with AI to:
- Conduct trade secret audits and strengthen compliance
- Implement and maintain a complete trade secret program
- Reduce third-party risk and employee turnover risk
- Support IP strategy for startups and established enterprises alike
Work alongside your intellectual property law attorney or IP firm to ensure protection is practical and defensible
If your competitive edge depends on what competitors cannot see, Tangibly can help you keep it that way.
Book a demo today to see how we help companies protect trade secrets and secure the know-how that drives growth.

