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Licensing Agreements for Startups: Turning Your IP into Revenue
Licensing your intellectual property - whether it’s code, brand, or content - can be a smart way to scale without manufacturing or selling yourself. But founders need to tread carefully: Licensing Agreements involve handing over rights to your most valuable asset.
Expanding Your Reach: What Startup Founders Should Know About Distribution Agreements
If your startup sells physical products or software, you may eventually need help reaching customers in new markets. A distribution agreement can be a powerful way to expand without building a large internal sales team.
Manufacturing Agreements for Startups: Legal Basics Behind the Build
If your startup builds physical products - hardware, wearables, or consumer goods - you need more than a handshake with your manufacturer. A well-drafted manufacturing agreement is essential to protect your product, control quality, and limit liability.
Getting Vendor Agreements Right: A Legal Checklist for Startup Founders
As your startup grows, so does your list of vendors - design agencies, cloud providers, contractors, and SaaS platforms. Every one of those relationships should be backed by a Vendor or Service Agreement that protects your interests and sets expectations.
FAQs
Open allYou risk fines, penalties, or lawsuits. For example, missing wage notices or payroll setup can trigger regulatory issues.
Before day one. Send documents and policies in advance so the employee begins with clarity and confidence.
At minimum, U.S. employees need an offer letter, I-9, W-4, and confidentiality/IP agreements. Some states require additional wage notices.
Yes. Even with a small team, onboarding helps establish culture, set expectations, and avoid compliance mistakes.
Contractors are best for short-term, specialized, or non-core projects. Employees are necessary for ongoing roles central to your business.
It creates legal and financial liabilities. Investors want clean workforce records to avoid unexpected tax or compliance risks.
No. Classification depends on the actual working relationship, not the job title or contract language.
Contractors control how they do their work and usually operate independently. Employees work under your direction and are integrated into your business.
They clarify compensation, benefits, and employment terms, reducing the risk of disputes and protecting the company legally.
Absolutely. Grants should be approved by the board, backed by a 409A valuation, and issued through a written equity plan.
Most startups use a 4-year vesting schedule with a 1-year cliff to ensure commitment and retention.
Yes, but it should be modest. Paying yourself something demonstrates value for your time, but it shouldn’t jeopardize the company’s survival.
Not entirely. Wrongful termination, discrimination, or retaliation claims are still possible. Document performance and follow fair processes.
You could face penalties, lawsuits, and government audits. Startups must track hours and pay overtime where required.
Yes. A handbook sets clear expectations and helps protect against legal claims, even for small teams.
Misclassifying employees as contractors or exempt workers can lead to back pay claims, penalties, and lawsuits.
You risk fines under laws like GDPR and CCPA, removal from app stores, and loss of user trust.
At least once a year, or whenever you change your data practices, adopt new tools, or when laws change.
A Privacy Policy explains how you handle user data. Terms of Service govern how users interact with your platform. Both are essential.
Yes. If you collect any personal data - emails, IP addresses, or cookies - you need one. Most app stores and ad networks also require it.

