Introducing Profiles: Find Any Company's Legal Contacts in Seconds

You wrote a demand letter. You Googled the company. You found a customer support email. You sent it. And then... nothing.

Sound familiar? You're not alone. This is the single biggest reason demand letters fail. Not because the letter was bad. Because it went to the wrong person.

Customer support reps don't handle legal disputes. They handle password resets and shipping updates. Your demand letter sitting in a support ticket queue is the same as your demand letter sitting in the trash.

Today we're fixing that.

Meet Profiles: Your Shortcut to the Right Desk

Profiles is a new feature inside PettyLawsuit that automatically finds the legal contacts for any business you're taking action against.

Type in a company name. Even a casual one like "McDonalds" or "tmobile." PettyLawsuit does the rest:

All of this gets auto-filled into your demand letter. No research. No guessing. No wasted time.

Here's a quick look at how it works:

Why This Matters More Than You Think

A demand letter is only as good as the person who reads it. Send it to customer service and it gets buried. Send it to the registered agent or legal department and something very different happens.

The registered agent has a legal obligation to forward legal documents to the company. That's literally their job. When your demand letter arrives on their desk, it gets routed to people who understand what a lawsuit means. People who can authorize a settlement.

That's the difference between being ignored and getting a response.

The Research Problem Nobody Talks About

Finding a company's legal contacts used to be a nightmare. Here's what it actually looked like:

  1. Figure out which state the company is incorporated in
  2. Navigate to that state's Secretary of State website (good luck with the UI)
  3. Search for the company's exact legal name (which you probably don't know)
  4. Find the registered agent listing
  5. Cross-reference with SEC filings if the company is public
  6. Try to find legal department emails through LinkedIn or corporate filings
  7. Figure out if you're dealing with a subsidiary or parent company

Most people give up at step 2. The ones who make it to step 7 usually spend hours doing it. And even then, they're not sure they got it right.

PettyLawsuit does all of this in seconds. Automatically.

100+ Companies Already Profiled

We've built verified, curated profiles for over 100 major companies. That includes Walmart, Amazon, Uber, Lyft, McDonald's, T-Mobile, Google, Meta, Cash App, and dozens more.

Each profile includes verified legal names, registered agent addresses, and legal department contacts. Not scraped from random websites. Actually verified.

And for companies not in the curated database? The system searches multiple sources including business directories, SEC filings, and public records to find the right legal entity. It scores results by confidence so you always get the most reliable information first.

Real Examples (This Gets Specific)

You type "Cash App." PettyLawsuit identifies Block, Inc. as the parent legal entity. Finds the registered agent. Routes your demand to verified legal contacts at Block's headquarters in San Francisco. You didn't have to know any of that.

You type "Tmobile." The system normalizes it to T-Mobile US, Inc. Pulls the registered agent address in Bellevue, WA. Finds specific legal department emails. Done.

You type "Amazon." Identified as Amazon.com, Inc. Verified legal contacts including associate general counsel information. Your demand letter goes straight to decision makers. Not a chatbot. Not a support rep.

Why Sending to the Right Person Changes Everything

Here's what most people don't understand about companies and legal disputes.

Customer support is designed to deflect. Their scripts are built around apologies, store credit, and "we're sorry for the inconvenience." They literally cannot authorize a $2,000 settlement. It's not in their power.

Legal departments are different. They do cost-benefit analysis. They know that fighting a legitimate small claims case costs more than settling it. When a formal demand letter lands on a legal team's desk, they calculate the risk. And most of the time, the math says: just pay it.

That's why 70% of PettyLawsuit cases resolve without ever going to court. The demand letter reaches someone who can actually do something about it.

How to Use Profiles

You don't need to do anything special. When you start a case on PettyLawsuit, just type in the company name. If we have a profile, the legal contacts auto-fill. If we don't, the system searches for them in real time.

Either way, your demand letter gets addressed to someone who matters. Not a support inbox that goes nowhere.

What About Individuals?

Profiles is built for businesses. If you're sending a demand letter to an individual (a landlord, a contractor, someone who owes you money), you'll still enter their info manually. But for any business dispute, from a gym that won't cancel your membership to an airline that owes you a refund, Profiles does the heavy lifting.

The Bottom Line

Sending a demand letter to the wrong person is like mailing a check to the wrong address. Doesn't matter how good the letter is. It won't get results if nobody with authority ever reads it.

Profiles makes sure your demand reaches decision makers. The legal team. The registered agent. The people who can write a check and make this go away.

Stop sending complaints into the void. Start your case on PettyLawsuit and see who you're actually dealing with.

FAQ

What is a registered agent?

A registered agent is a person or company officially designated to receive legal documents on behalf of a business. Every company that's registered with a state is required to have one. When you send a demand letter to a registered agent, they're legally obligated to forward it to the company.

Can I send a demand letter to a company's registered agent?

Yes. Sending a demand letter to a company's registered agent is one of the most effective ways to make sure your demand gets taken seriously. The registered agent is the official point of contact for legal matters.

Normally you'd have to dig through SEC filings, LinkedIn, or corporate websites. PettyLawsuit's Profiles feature finds legal department contacts automatically when you start a case.

Does PettyLawsuit work for any company?

We have verified profiles for 100+ major companies. For companies not in our database, the system searches public records, business directories, and other sources to find the correct legal entity and contacts.

Many companies operate under names that are different from their official legal name. For example, "Cash App" is actually Block, Inc. "Google" is Alphabet Inc. Using the correct legal name on a demand letter ensures it's taken seriously and properly routed.

Do I need a lawyer to send a demand letter?

No. PettyLawsuit lets you create and send a demand letter without a lawyer. The platform handles the legal contacts, formatting, and certified mail delivery. Plans start at $29.