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Insights

What Is General Counsel and Why Do Startups Need It?

GeneralCounsel (GC) refers to a company’s primary legal advisor - the attorney orlegal team responsible for managing legal, governance, and compliance mattersthat impact the whole business. In a startup, a GC helps founders balance riskand growth by providing legal strategy that aligns with business goals. Theyhelp ensure decisions are legally sound, corporate governance is in place, andregulatory obligations are met as the company scales.

Top 10 Legal Mistakes Startups Make (and How to Avoid Them)

Launching a startup is exciting, fast paced, and full of pressure to move quickly. Most founders spend their early energy on building the product, refining the pitch, and chasing early users or investors.

Why Monthly Legal Subscriptions Are Replacing Traditional Law Firms

Over the past few years, businesses across the United States have started rethinking how they work with lawyers. The old model of hourly billing often created stress, unpredictability, and hesitation. Many companies waited to call their attorney until a problem became serious because they were worried about what the bill would look like later.

8 Legal Tips When You Start a Business

So you’ve decided to start a new business, time to make a to-do list. There are several important steps to complete to ensure that your business is properly established and meets legal requirements. We’re here to help make sure you get all your boxes checked off correctly.

Templates are a starting point, but your TOS should be customized to your business model, user base, and compliance obligations.

TOS govern how users interact with your platform, while a Privacy Policy explains how you collect, use, and store their personal data.

Yes. Any business with a website, app, or platform should have TOS to set user expectations and limit liability.

Yes - if properly drafted and accepted (usually through clickwrap), TOS create an enforceable contract between you and your users.

Without one, state default laws govern the partnership. These rules may not align with your intentions and can lead to disputes.

Yes. Agreements should be reviewed and updated as the business grows or circumstances change.

Yes. As long as it’s properly drafted and executed, it sets enforceable rules for ownership, profit-sharing, and decision-making.

Yes. Even the strongest relationships benefit from clear rules. A written agreement prevents misunderstandings and protects both parties if circumstances change.

When the relationship involves money, intellectual property, or liability risk, you should transition from an MOU to a formal agreement.

Courts may enforce MOUs if they look like contractsβ€”for example, if they include payment terms or obligations. To avoid confusion, clearly state whether the MOU is binding.

Contracts create enforceable obligations. MOUs generally outline intentions and expectations but stop short of legal enforceability.

Most MOUs are not legally binding, but they can include binding provisions if clearly stated, such as confidentiality or exclusivity.

Overcommitting - such as granting long exclusivity or including too much detail - can lock you into unfavorable terms before negotiations are complete.

Yes, unless you are bound by specific provisions. However, backing out without good reason may damage future relationships.

LOIs outline deal terms upfront, giving both sides confidence before investing in due diligence and full contract drafting.

Most of an LOI is non-binding, but certain provisions like confidentiality and exclusivity are enforceable.

If you handle personal data, a DPA ensures compliance with GDPR, CCPA, and similar laws. Many enterprise clients require it before signing.

Usually the customer, though the provider may retain limited rights to use the data for service delivery, analytics, or improvements.

Yes, especially in B2B deals. SLAs provide uptime guarantees and remedies for service failures, which are critical for enterprise customers.

Traditional licenses transfer a copy of the software, while SaaS Agreements grant access to use the software as a service without ownership.

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