OPINION
This case springs from a trademark dispute between two large nationwide retailers in the seemingly disparate markets of automotive parts and electronics. Plaintiff-Appellant AutoZone, Inc. (“AutoZone”) is a nationwide retailer of consumer automotive products that uses the mark AU-TOZONE. AutoZone and its wholly owned subsidiary Speedbar, Inc. brought an action against DefendanLAppellee Tan-dy Corporation (“Tandy” or “Radio *789 Shack”), which owns the Radio Shack chain, after Tandy began using its POW-ERZONE mark to promote a section of its retail outlets dedicated to selling various power-related items, such as batteries, extension cords, and chargers for electronics. AutoZone alleged that Tandy’s use of POWERZONE constituted trademark infringement, tradename infringement, unfair competition, breach of contract, and trademark dilution. The United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee granted Tandy’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed all of AutoZone’s claims. Because AutoZone has not presented enough evidence such that a reasonable jury could conclude that there existed a “likelihood of confusion” between POWERZONE and AUTOZONE or that Tandy’s use of POWERZONE diluted the AUTOZONE mark, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURE
A. The 1982 Litigation
Although this particular round of legal action was instigated by Tandy’s adoption of the POWERZONE mark, AutoZone and Tandy’s litigious relationship dates back two decades. In 1979, AutoZone’s predecessor Malone & Hyde, Inc. (“M & H”) opened a chain of retail-auto parts stores in Tennessee and Arkansas under the name “Auto Shack.” Tandy brought a trademark infringement action against M & H for the use of the AUTO SHACK mark.
Tandy Corp. v. Malone & Hyde, Inc.,
B. AutoZone, Tandy, and the Disputed Trademarks
1. AutoZone
In the years following the settlement, AutoZone blossomed into a large, successful national chain, which currently owns or franchises more than 3,000 stores in forty-two states and Mexico and which reported $4.5 billion in sales in 2000. Auto-Zone sells a wide variety of automotive parts and supplies, 'including car batteries, tires, engine parts, and assorted automotive peripherals. Some products sold at AutoZone are also sold at Radio Shack, including automobile power adapters, car stereos, amplifiers, cables, connectors, switches, radar detectors, alarms, and citizen’s. band radio receivers. AutoZone also sells commonly available consumer items, such as batteries, extension cords, power strips, and tools, all of which a consumer could find at Radio Shack, as well as at a variety of convenience stores, supermarkets, and department stores. Depending on the size of the store, an AutoZone outlet carries either 21,500 different products (as measured, by stock keeping units, or SKUs) or 55,100 different products. Of the 325 products sold by Radio Shack in its POWERZONE section, 132 products are also carried by Au-toZone. Thus, less than 1% of all the products offered by AutoZone overlap with those sold in the POWERZONE section.
The AUTOZONE mark consists of the word “AutoZone” slanted to the right and spelled with a capital “A” and “Z.” The mark also features a “speedbar” design, which consists of diagonal bars of decreasing thickness intended to convey an impression of rapidity or movement. When in color, the word “AutoZone” is red, and the speedbar design is orange. When col- or advertising is not available, the Auto- *790 Zone mark naturally appears in black and white. Generally, the speedbar design is located either to the left or to the right of the word “AutoZone,” but occasionally the speedbar design appears on both sides of the name. There is no dispute that Auto-Zone properly registered the name and the speedbar design with the Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”).
2. Tandy
Tandy is largest nationwide retailer of consumer electronics. Through its 7,186 Radio Shack outlets, it reported $4.1 billion in sales in 1999. As a marketing tactic, Radio Shack pursued a “store within a store concept”: it physically grouped its core target products into separate sections within its retail outlets. For example, within a Radio Shack outlet a consumer might find a Sprint Communications Store, an RCA Digital Entertainment Center, a Microsoft Information Center, and a Compaq Creative learning center. At some point in the mid-1990s, Radio Shack sought to create a store-within-a-store for one of its primary anchors — “the business of connecting things,” which includes batteries, power supplies, cords, connectors, and resistors. Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) at 168 (David Edmondson Dep.). Market research conducted by Radio Shack demonstrated that consumers preferred POW-ERZONE as the name for the new power-related store-within-a-store. Before launching the POWERZONE concept, Radio Shack hired a trademark search firm, which discovered a Georgia business that used the POWERZONE mark and sold various types of batteries. Radio Shack purchased the rights to the POWER-ZONE mark from this firm and began using the mark on July 2,1998.
The POWERZONE mark features the word “PowerZone,” spelled with a capital “P” and a capital “Z,” bookended by graphic elements consisting of same-sized diagonal lines slanting to the right. The word “PowerZone” generally appears on a clearly defined, cylindrical object that closely resembles a battery and is centered in between the slanted lines moving outward from the battery. The words Radio Shack and an “R” with a circle around it, which is a Radio Shack trademark, also appear on the battery. In some advertisements, the battery, containing the word “PowerZone” and the Radio Shack mark, appears without the slanted lines. Additionally, in some advertisements, the word “PowerZone” is depicted without any accompanying graphics. The POWER-ZONE mark almost always appears in black and white. However, in color advertisements, the word PowerZone is written in white, and the battery has a coppery yellow-orange color.
With limited exceptions, Radio Shack uses POWERZONE either as a complement to or in close physical proximity with the Radio Shack name and the Radio Shack house mark, such that a consumer would be unlikely to see one without the other whether in advertising or at an actual Radio Shack outlet. AutoZone uncovered at least one example in which POWERZONE appeared without the accompanying Radio Shack mark on Radio Shack’s website. In this example, the words “Radio Shack” and “RadioSh-ack.com” appear multiple times in close proximity to the word POWERZONE, and a consumer would not see the word POWERZONE without either purposely going to or being directed to RadioSh-ack.com.
C. Procedural Background
Shortly after Radio Shack began using the POWERZONE mark, AutoZone requested that Radio Shack stop and retract its application to register the mark. Auto- *791 Zone sent Radio Shack a formal cease-and-desist letter on February 1, 1999. Radio Shack refused to comply. AutoZone filed this action in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee on September 15, 1999. It asserted five claims for relief: 1) service mark and trademark infringement, see 15 U.S.C. § 1114(1); 2) tradename infringement, see id.; 3) unfair competition, see 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a); 4) service mark and trademark dilution under both federal and Tennessee statutes, see 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c) and Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-25-513; and 5) breach of contract. The district court properly asserted jurisdiction over claims one through four pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 1121(a) and 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1338(a) (trademark claim), 1338(b) (unfair competition). The court also properly exercised jurisdiction over AutoZone’s breach of contract claim and Tennessee state dilution claim pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332(a)(1), 1367(a). 1 As part of the discovery that took place through 2000 and 2001, AutoZone commissioned a consumer survey from its expert, Michael Rappeport (“Rappeport”). , The purpose of the survey, the methodological validity and significance of which are highly disputed, was to demonstrate the strength of the AUTOZONE mark, although AutoZone also believes that the study demonstrates actual confusion between AUTOZONE and POWERZONE. Additionally, for the purposes of demonstrating that third-party use of trademarks containing ZONE was pervasive, Radio Shack discovered that as of March 16, 2001, there were 745 active trademarks that used or incorporated ZONE. At least sixteen of the registered marks were used in the automotive or travel-related industries. At least forty-three entities operated websites that use ZONE either alone or in conjunction with other words.
Radio Shack filed a motion for summary judgment on March 19, 2001, which the district court granted in its entirety on November 9, 2001. The district court held that there were no genuine issues of material fact regarding the likelihood of confusion between the AUTOZONE and POWERZONE marks.
AutoZone, Inc. v. Tandy Corp.,
II. ANALYSIS
Although AutoZone asserted five separate claims against Radio Shack, the claims can be grouped into two umbrella claims: the “likelihood of confusion” claims and the dilution claim. The trademark infringement, tradename infringement, unfair competition, and breach of contract claims all require us to employ a “likelihood of confusion” analysis. The essence of a trademark or tradename infringement claim brought pursuant to 15 , U.S.C. § 1114(1) is “whether the defendant’s use of the disputed mark is likely, to cause confusion among consumers regarding the origin of the goods offered by the parties.”
Daddy’s Junky Music Stores, Inc. v. Big Daddy’s Family Music Ctr.,
Any person who, on or in connection with any goods or services uses in commerce any word, term, name, symbol, or device, or any combination thereof, or any false designation of origin, false or misleading description of fact, or false or misleading representation of fact, which-(A) is likely to cause comfl~-siort, or to cause mistake, or to deceive shall be liable in a civil action by any person who believes that he or she is likely to be damaged by such act.
15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1)(A) (emphasis added);
see Wynn Oil Co. v. Am. Way Serv. Corp.,
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment in a trademark infringement case.
See Daddy’s,
B. The “Likelihood of Confusion” Claims
The district court did not err in granting summary judgment on the trademark infringement, tradename infringement, unfair competition, and breach of contract claims because AutoZone failed to show that there existed a genuine issue of material fact concerning the likelihood of confusion. When evaluating the likelihood of confusion, we analyze and balance the following factors:
1.strength of the senior mark (Auto-Zone)
2.similarity of the marks
3.relatedness of the goods or services
4.evidence of actual confusion
5.marketing channels used
6.1ikely degree of purchaser care
*793 7.the intent of Radio Shack in selecting the POWERZONE mark
8.the likelihood of expansion of the product lines.
Frisch’s Rests., Inc. v. Elby’s Big Boy of Steubenville, Inc.,
Neither party disputes three of the eight Frisch factors-marketing channels used, likely degree of purchaser care, and likelihood of product-line expansion. First, the "marketing channels used" factor looks at “the parties’ predominant customers and their marketing approaches.”
Therma-Scan, Inc. v. Thermoscan, Inc.,
1. Strength of Senior Mark
The district court had resolved this factor in AutoZone’s favor, concluding that as a matter of law, the AUTOZONE mark was strong. “The strength of a mark is a factual determination of the mark’s distinctiveness. The more distinct a mark, the more likely is the confusion resulting from its infringement, and therefore, the more protection it is due. A mark is strong and distinctive when the public readily accepts it as the hallmark of a particular source; such acceptance can occur when the mark is unique, when it. has received intensive advertisement, or both.”
Daddy’s,
Even though AUTOZONE is a suggestive or descriptive mark, and thus is less likely to cause confusion, there is no dispute that AUTOZONE is incontestable. "Incontestable" trademarks-those that have not been successfully challenged within five years of registration, see 15 IJ.S.C. § 1065-are presumed to be strong marks. When a mark is incontestable, "an infringement action may not be defended on the ground that the mark is merely descriptive." Jet, Inc. v. Sewage Aeration Sys.,
Radio Shack contends that extensive third-party use of ZONE-related marks saps the strength of the AUTO-ZONE mark. Radio Shack presented evidence that 745 trademarks registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) use the term ZONE in various combinations. Sixteen registered marks use ZONE in the automotive-goods-and-services industry. Furthermore, in excess of forty websites use ZONE for a variety of services. “[MJerely showing the existence of marks in the records of the [PTO] will not materially affect the distinctiveness of another’s mark which is actively used in commerce.”
Homeowners,
While ZONE may be used pervasively in the marketplace, Radio Shack has not demonstrated that AUTOZONE is so similarly employed. “[T]he validity and distinctiveness of a composite trademark is determined by viewing the trademark as a whole, as it appears in the marketplace.”
Official Airline Guides, Inc. v. Goss,
AutoZone asserts that the district court erred by not giving enough weight to the strength-of-mark factor in the overall eight-factor test. AutoZone suggests that the court “did not accord AUTOZONE the broad protection to which strong marks are entitled,” AutoZone Br. at 38, because the court failed to evaluate the other factors in light of the ruling that AUTO-ZONE was a strong mark. AutoZone’s contention is baseless; AutoZone has not pointed to any case in which we have stated that the strength-of-mark factor predominates over the other seven Frisch factors. Contrary to AutoZone’s position, the fact that a mark is strong does not impact our analysis of the similarity of the marks, the relatedness of the products and services, or any of the other factors in the likelihood-of-confusion test.
2. Similarity of the Marks
The similarity of the senior and junior marks is “a factor of considerable weight.”
Daddy’s,
Radio Shack distorts this analysis slightly: it requests that we delete ZONE because of the word’s common usage and consider only the similarity between AUTO and POWER, of which there is none. By doing so, Radio Shack asks us to violate the “anti-dissection rule,” whereby we “view marks in their entirety and focus on their overall impressions, not individual features.”
Id.; see also Therma-Scan,
The AUTOZONE and POWERZONE marks have some visual and linguistic *796 similarities, but ultimately their differences outnumber their similarities such that the likelihood of confusion is small. For both, the mark appears as a single word, with the first letter and the “Z” in ZONE capitalized. They each have three syllables, although the pronunciation of the first two syllables is not similar. Additionally, both marks are generally featured with a series of slanting lines book-ending the main word. That is where the similarities end. Aside from the clear differences in the accentuation of the first syllables, the AUTOZONE font (soft-edged or rounded) is distinct from the POWERZONE font (more angular). The word AUTOZONE is slanted whereas POWERZONE is not. When viewed in conjunction with the slanted lines of decreasing thickness that emanate from the word AUTOZONE, the entire design gives an impression of momentum or speed. By contrast, the slanted lines on either side of the word POWERZONE are all of the same size, perhaps symbolizing the flow of power. Occasionally, POWERZONE appears without the slanted lines. POWERZONE is almost always featured on a cylindrical object that closely resembles a battery, particularly given the clear depiction of a battery’s positive node on the right side of the object. AU-TOZONE has no such aspect in its design. For the AUTOZONE mark, the word AUTOZONE appears in red and the slanted lines of decreasing width appear in orange. POWERZONE generally appears in black and white, but when it is in a color advertisement, POWERZONE is written in white, the slanted lines are black, and the battery is a coppery-yellow color.
Several cases provide points of comparison. In
Jet
we ruled that the marks JET and AEROB-A-JET were dissimilar. We noted that the two marks differed visually and verbally, partially because the first syllables of the marks received distinct emphasis.
Jet,
Furthermore, the POWERZONE mark’s consistent proximity to Radio Shack’s house mark is significant. The use of a challenged junior mark together with a house mark or house tradename can distinguish the challenged junior mark from the senior mark and make confusion less likely. 3 McCarthy § 23:43, at 23-129;
see Nabisco, Inc. v. Warner-Lambert Co.,
In conclusion, the marks are not similar enough to create a likelihood of confusion. There are considerable visual and linguistic differences. Furthermore, the use of the Radio Shack house mark in proximity to POWERZONE reduces the likelihood of confusion from any similarity that does exist.
3. Relatedness of Goods or Services
The parties vigorously dispute the relatedness of their goods and services. We have employed three criteria for testing the relatedness factor:
First, if the parties compete directly, confusion is likely if the marks are sufficiently similar; second, if the goods and services are somewhat related, but not competitive, then the likelihood of confusion will turn on other factors; finally, if the products are unrelated, confusion is highly unlikely.
Kellogg Co. v. Toucan Golf, Inc.,
*798 AutoZone and Radio Shack do not fit neatly into our tripartite system. On the one hand, common sense suggests Auto-Zone and Radio Shack do not directly compete: few consumers would make the mistake of traveling to Radio Shack to purchase an oil filter or would enter an AutoZone to buy a DVD player. See J.A. at 950 (Sum. J. Hr'g Tr.) (the district court brusquely, but aptly asking, “What idiot who wants to buy an automobile part is going to go to a Radio Shack?”). On the other hand, the products offered by Auto-Zone and Radio Shack are not completely unrelated. AutoZone and Radio Shack compete directly in selling certain products, even though these products comprise less than 1% of AutoZone’s total stock and AutoZone does not extensively advertise the types of products also sold in Radio Shack’s POWERZONE area. Unlike Kellogg, in which the cereal manufacturer had made only superficial and extremely limited in-roads to the golf industry, AutoZone and Radio Shack, which generally occupy distinct niches, converge in the area of power sources and power connections. We are presented with a competitive context that combines elements of the first and third criteria: the parties compete directly in a very limited fashion, but for the most part, the products offered by each company are unrelated and their marks are not very similar.
AutoZone believes the degree of relatedness presents a genuine issue of material fact. AutoZone contends that the district court erred in focusing on the fact that the total overlap between the stores (number of products in common/total number of AutoZone products) was less than one percent when AutoZone offers 40% of the products sold by Radio Shack in its POW-ERZONE area. There is no factual dispute, however, because both figures are accurate and undisputed. The pertinent question is which method of examining the overlap best describes the relatedness of the products as a matter of law. The reality is that both figures inform the analysis by demonstrating that there is generally no overlap, except when considering a limited subset of products. It is also significant that most of these overlapping products are not unique to either Radio Shack or AutoZone, as batteries and power cords are generally offered by many different kinds of retailers, including grocery stores, pharmacies, and hardware stores. Furthermore, the 40% figure preferred by AutoZone is deceptive. We have no information about the percentage of Radio Shack products sold in the POWER-ZONE area. We also note that the existence of a high percentage of overlap when considering an extremely small subset of products does not demonstrate a high degree of relatedness: by AutoZone’s logic, if POWERZONE stocked only five types of batteries all of which were also sold by AutoZone, the overlap would be 100%, even though in reality Radio Shack and AutoZone would share only five products of the approximately 55,000 offered by Au-toZone.
In sum, although there is a minuscule overlap between the products offered by AutoZone and Radio Shack, which appears larger when limiting the analysis to only the POWERZONE store-within-a-store, the products offered by the two companies are not related enough such that this factor tilts in AutoZone’s direction.
4. Evidence of Actual Confusion
“Evidence of actual confusion is undoubtedly the best evidence of likelihood of confusion.”
Wynn Oil Co. v. Thomas,
5. Radio Shack’s Intent
Finally, AutoZone argues that the district court erred because there is a genuine dispute over whether Radio Shack intentionally infringed upon the AUTO-ZONE mark. Proving intent is not necessary to demonstrate likelihood of confusion, but “the presence of that factor strengthens the likelihood of confusion.”
Wynn II,
AutoZone has presented no direct evidence of an intent by Radio Shack to *800 infringe upon the AUTOZONE mark. AutoZone does not dispute Radio Shack’s assertion that it “did not copy the AU-TOZONE mark or intend to trade off any of [AutoZone]’s goodwill in AUTO-ZONE when it chose the POWERZONE mark.” J.A. at 784 (PI. Local Rule 8(b)(7) Statement). Indeed, there is simply no evidence that Radio Shack chose the POWERZONE mark in order to steal customers from AutoZone. Radio Shack apparently selected POWERZONE based solely upon the results of a consumer survey.
AutoZone instead argues that circumstantial evidence of copying supports an inference of intentional infringement. As proof that Radio Shack was carelessly or negligently indifferent to AutoZone’s trademark rights, AutoZone points to Radio Shack’s knowledge of the AUTOZONE mark in conjunction with Radio Shack’s failure to consult an attorney knowledgeable in trademark law before adopting POWERZONE. Radio Shack concedes that as a corporation it was aware of the AUTOZONE mark when it chose the POWERZONE mark, which is unsurprising given that Radio Shack itself agreed to the use of AUTOZONE as part of the 1987 Settlement. This circuit has not yet decided whether evidence of carelessness or negligence with regards .to searches for preexisting marks suffices as circumstantial proof of an intent to infringe. We do not decide this issue today, although our decision in
Daddy’s
implies the potential difficulty of employing such a standard.
See Daddy’s,
AutoZone has not presented any evidence of bad intent. Nor has it presented any circumstantial evidence of negligence or carelessness, if such evidence suffices to create an inference of intent to pilfer the goodwill in the AUTOZONE mark. This factor weighs against the likelihood of confusion.
6. Conclusion
The district court did not err in granting Radio Shack’s motion for summary judgment because AutoZone did not present enough evidence for a jury to conclude that there was a likelihood of confusion. Most of the factors weigh against the likelihood of confusion: there is no evidence of actual confusion, the marks are not similar, there is no evidence that Radio Shack intended to cause confusion over the marks, and neither party plans to expand its product lines into the other’s at any point in the near future. The relatedness-of-products factor at best does not aid the analysis and at worst suggests that the likelihood of confusion is small, given that AutoZone and Radio Shack offer complete
*801
ly disparate products except for one relatively small portion of their respectively enormous inventories. It is true that Au-toZone’s mark is strong, that AutoZone and Radio Shack use common marketing channels, and there is a low degree of purchaser care, all of which weigh in favor of a likelihood of confusion. Yet, these factors are not enough to tip the balance. In considering the touchstone question of “whether relevant consumers are likely to believe that the products or services offered by the parties are affiliated in some way,”
Homeowners,
C. The Dilution Claim
AutoZone also contests the district court’s grant of summary judgment on its dilution claim. AutoZone principally argues that the district court erred as a matter of law because it employed the wrong test in assessing AutoZone’s dilution claim. While we decline to rule definitively on the propriety of the test used by the district court, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment as proper because AutoZone failed to present any evidence of actual dilution.
1. Dilution As Distinct From Infringement
The law governing dilution is independent from the law attendant to claims of trademark infringement.
Kellogg Co. v. Exxon Corp.,
The Federal Trademark Dilution Act of 1995 (“FTDA”), Pub.L. No. 104-98, 109 Stat. 985 (1995), “seeks to prevent both of these forms of dilution by protecting the trademark owner from the erosion of the distinctiveness and prestige of a trademark caused by ... a proliferation of borrowings, that while not degrading the original seller’s mark, are so numerous as to deprive the mark of its distinctiveness and hence impact.” Id. (quotations omitted) (alteration in original). Section 43(c) of the amended Lanham Act provides,
The owner of a famous mark shall be entitled, subject to the principles of equity and upon such terms as the court deems reasonable, to an injunction against another person’s commercial use in commerce of a mark or trade name, if such use begins after the mark has become famous and causes dilution of the distinctive quality of the mark, and to obtain such other relief as is provided in this subsection.
15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(1). Dilution is defined by the FTDA as “the lessening of the capacity of a famous mark to identify and distinguish goods or services, regardless of the presence or absence of [ ] (1) competition between the owner of the famous mark and other parties, or (2) likelihood of confusion, mistake, or deception.” 15 U.S.C. § 1127. The Tennessee state dilu *802 tion statute is similar to the federal dilution statute. It reads,
The owner of a mark which is famous in this state shall be entitled, subject to the principles of equity and upon such terms as the court deems reasonable, to an injunction against another person’s commercial use of a mark or trade name, if such use begins after the mark has become famous and causes dilution of the distinctive quality of the mark, and to obtain such other relief as is provided in this section.
Tenn.Code Ann. 47-25-513(a). There are no Tennessee cases that analyze this statute, and in the past we have interchangeably analyzed the Tennessee and federal antidilution statutes.
Kellogg Co. v. Exxon Corp.,
2. The Federal Dilution Test
We have repeatedly employed a five-part dilution test. To succeed in a federal dilution claim:
[T]he senior mark must be (1) famous; and (2) distinctive. Use of the junior mark must (3) be in commerce; (4) have begun subsequent to the senior mark becoming famous; and (5) cause dilution of the distinctive quality of the senior mark.
Kellogg Co. v. Toucan Golf, Inc.,
a. Distinctiveness
In the court below, Radio Shack disputed the distinctiveness of the AUTOZONE mark, but the district court held that the mark was distinctive.
AutoZone,
b. The Fifth Factor
The central dilution issue in this appeal is how to analyze the fifth and final factor, which measures whether the junior mark caused actual dilution of the distinctive quality of the senior mark. The district court, acting properly at the time, relied on our opinion in
V Secret Catalogue, Inc. v. Moseley,
distinctiveness; similarity of the marks; proximity of the products and the likelihood of bridging the gap; interrelationship among the distinctiveness of the senior mark, the similarity of the junior *803 mark, and the proximity of the products; shared consumers and geographic limitations; sophistication of consumers; actual confusion; adjectival or referential quality of the junior use; harm to the junior user and delay by the senior user; and the effect of [the] senior’s prior laxity in protecting the mark.
V Secret,
On appeal, AutoZone asks us to reject the district court’s holding and its application of the Nabisco test. AutoZone criticizes the Nabisco test for erroneously duplicating several factors of the likelihood-of-confusion test and for incorrectly shifting the burden of proving several affirmative defenses onto the plaintiff. In assessing AutoZone’s arguments, we must initially determine whether V Secret incorporated the Nabisco test into the law of this circuit such that we are bound by the decision of a prior panel. It is only if V Secret adopted the Nabisco test that we must assess what effect the Supreme Court’s reversal of V Secret has upon our application of the ten Nabisco factors.
(1) V Secret’s Treatment of the Nabisco Test
AutoZone contends that we never expressly adopted the Nabisco test, instead preferring to leave the issue open for “further explication on a ‘case-by-case’ basis.” AutoZone Br. at 12. AutoZone is partially correct. This court stated in V Secret:
We find that these factors effectively span the breadth of considerations a court must weigh in assessing' a claim under the FTDA, from the inherent qualities of the marks themselves, to the behavior of the corporate entities in introducing a mark into commerce, to the highly practical and subjective considerations of the effect of the marks on the actual consumers who will consider them, and find them persuasive to our analysis.
V Secret,
AutoZone is incorrect, however, when it claims that
V Secret
did not adopt the
Nabisco
test.
V Secret
explicitly adopted the general framework and thrust of the
Nabisco
inquiry, but it did so with the recognition that the test is variable and subject to both maturation and refinement. We imported the
Nabisco
test with the expectation that it would evolve. As the
Nabisco
court itself exhorted, ‘We make
*804
no suggestion that the factors we have focused on exhaust the test of what is pertinent. New fact patterns will inevitably suggest additional pertinent factors .... [N]o court should, at least at this early stage, make or confine itself to a closed list of the factors pertinent to the analysis of rights under the new antidilution statute.”
Nabisco,
(2) The Supreme Court and Nabisco
The Supreme Court’s reversal of
V Secret
calls into doubt the continued vitality of the
Nabisco
test. Between the district court’s grant of summary judgment and the parties’ oral argument before us, the Supreme Court reversed
V Secret See Moseley v. v. Secret Catalogue, Inc.,
Nothing in the. Supreme Court’s opinion in Moseley addressed the efficacy of the ten-factor test; the Supreme Court did not criticize the Second Circuit for creating the test or the Sixth Circuit for adopting it. The Supreme Court in essence made it more difficult for dilution claims to succeed because plaintiffs face a much higher hurdle of demonstrating actual dilution, but the Court was silent as to the manner in which courts must evaluate plaintiffs’ success in overcoming that hurdle. This silence could imply that a test designed to measure likelihood of dilution may not be appropriate to evaluate actual dilution, but we are left without firm guidance on the issue.
(3) AutoZone’s Failure to Present Evidence of Actual Dilution
We need not resolve whether the
Nabisco
factors may be useful in future cases because AutoZone here has presented no evidence of actual dilution.
3
However, we
*805
note that several of the
Nabisco
factors' are particularly
unhelpful
in cases such as this one. Given that the FTDA authorizes dilution claims no matter whether there exists competition between the owners of the respective marks or whether there is a strong likelihood of confusion between the marks, the factors measuring “proximity of the products,”
Nabisco,
No matter the remaining vitality of the Nabisco test, the district court properly granted summary judgment because AutoZone has not presented enough evidence of actual dilution such that there exists a genuine dispute of material fact for a jury to resolve. Coupled with Auto-Zone’s failure to provide any evidence that the PowerZone mark blurred the distinctiveness of the AutoZone mark, the dissimilarity between the two marks by itself demonstrates why AutoZone’s claim cannot succeed. The “similarity” test for dilution claims is more stringent than in the infringement milieu:
The ... test of similarity used in the traditional likelihood of confusion test cannot be the guide [for dilution], for likelihood of confusion is not the test of dilution. For blurring ... to occur, the marks must at least be similar enough that a significant segment of the target group of customers sees the two marks as essentially the same. Blurring is one mark seen by customers as now identifying two sources. But two different marks identifying two different sources is not blurring and will not cause dilution.
4 McCarthy § 24:90:2, at 24-160. In
V Secret,
we considered it important that the “two marks in questions are
highly similar.” V Secret,
AutoZone’s dilution claim must fail because the absence of a high degree of similarity between AUTOZONE and POWERZONE underscores AutoZone’s failure to provide any evidence of actual dilution. Given that there is not even enough similarity between the two marks to demonstrate a likelihood of confusion, the marks are certainly not highly similar or nearly identical such that AutoZone can prove that actual dilution has occurred. The two marks look different; they are written in different fonts and colors. They utilize different designs (slanted versus nonslanted tradename) and are meant to convey different messages. They also sound different because there is little acoustic similarity between AUTO and POWER. As a comparison, AUTOZONE and a hypothetical AUDIOZONE would have a higher level of acoustic similarity. Additionally, the common word between AUTOZONE and POWERZONE is pro *807 nounced second and is consequently deem-phasized.
Because we hold that AUTOZONE and POWERZONE are not similar enough to pass the higher threshold required to prove actual dilution, and because Auto-Zone has produced no other evidence of actual dilution, AutoZone cannot demonstrate that Radio Shack’s use of POWER-ZONE caused “dilution of the distinctive quality of the senior mark.”
Kellogg Co. v. Toucan Golf, Inc.,
c. Conclusion Regarding Dilution Claim
In sum, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment because there are no genuine issues of material fact regarding AutoZone’s dilution claim. Auto-Zone failed to present evidence satisfying the fifth and ultimate factor in our five-part test for dilution. AutoZone also contends that because the Supreme Court altered the standard for dilution claims we must remand the case so that the district court can reevaluate its decision in light of
Moseley.
AutoZone’s argument falls wide of the mark.
Moseley
raised the bar for dilution claims. If AutoZone failed in its efforts to show dilution under the more generous “likelihood of dilution” standard, it will not find success under a more stringent test.
See Kellogg Co. v. Toucan Golf, Inc.,
III. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Radio Shack. AutoZone did not present any genuine issues of material fact regarding the likelihood of confusion between AUTO-ZONE and POWERZONE. Nor did Au-toZone provide evidence that would allow a jury to conclude that the POWERZONE mark actually diluted the AUTOZONE mark. Under these circumstances none of AutoZone’s claims can withstand Radio Shack’s summary judgment motion. We AFFIRM.
Notes
. AutoZone is a Nevada corporation, which has its principal place of business in Memphis, Tennessee. Speedbar, Inc. ("Speed-bar”), which is wholly owned by AutoZone, is also captioned as a named plaintiff-appellant. Speedbar is a Nevada corporation, which has its principal place of business in the Cayman Islands. Speedbar actually owns the AUTO-ZONE mark and licenses its use to AutoZone. Tandy is a Delaware corporation, which has its principal place of business in Texas.
. There are several problems with Rappe-port’s study. The study attempted to show the strength of the AutoZone mark by giving survey participants in various malls one part of a well-known retail chain (WAL -- or - DEPOT) and asking them to fill in the blank. One of the questions was "AUTO -." Of 110 respondents, 48% answered ZONE, .14% answered PARTS, 25% offered various other answers, and 12% did not offer any response. First, it is questionable whether the results are statistically significant given the small number of respondents. Second, the surveyors told participants at the outset that the survey sought to test their knowledge of retail chains. This preliminary statement limited the universe of potential answers to the fill-in-the-blanks questions.
Rappeport has been criticized by other courts for the employment of faulty methodologies and the presentation of unreliable results.
See Indianapolis Colts, Inc. v. Metro. Baltimore Football Club, Ltd. P’ship,
. Our sole
post-Moseley
dilution case did not explicitly cite to the
Nabisco
test when the plaintiff failed to provide evidence showing that actual dilution occurred.
Kellogg Co. v. Toucan Golf, Inc.,
. Other circuits have excluded these and certain additional
Nabisco
factors in analyzing dilution claims and adopted simpler tests.
See Eli Lilly & Co. v. Natural Answers, Inc.,
. AutoZone protests that Jet is not relevant here because we applied the stronger similarity threshold only in the midst of a discussion of the Ohio state antidilution statute. However, Jet also evaluated the plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint to add a federal dilution claim under § 1125(c). In ruling that such an amendment would be futile, we spoke directly to the degree of similarity needed to succeed in a federal dilution claim: "[T]he federal dilution claim would fail because the marks are not sufficiently similar. Although some aspects of this claim would be different under the federal statute than under Ohio common law, we would still require a greater degree of similarity than is needed under the likelihood of confusion test." Id. (emphasis added).
