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How Does Outsourced or Fractional General Counsel Work?
Outsourced or fractional General Counsel provides legal leadership without a full-time hire. Startups subscribe to a legal service provider - like @VirtualCounsel - that gives them access to experienced attorneys under predictable pricing structures. This means you can get strategic advice, document review, governance support, and risk mitigation as you need it without a large, fixed salary.
What Does General Counsel Do During Fundraising and Investor Relations?
During fundraising, General Counsel reviews and negotiates key legal documentation -including term sheets, investment agreements, and shareholder rights. They help ensure that terms align with your long-term goals and that you retain necessary rights without unintended obligations.
What Legal Risks Do Startups Face and How Can General Counsel Help?
Startups face a range of legal risks across multiple domains, including contracts, compliance, employment, investor negotiations, and data/privacy laws. General Counsel helps identify these risks before they become problems. They evaluate contracts for liabilities, advise on regulatory requirements in your industry, and help implement policies that protect the business and its stakeholders.
How Do General Counsel Support Corporate Governance?
Corporate governance refers to the systems and rules by which a company is directed andc ontrolled. General Counsel supports governance by helping define and document decision-making processes, preparing board resolutions, and ensuring compliance with bylaws and state laws. This involves formalizing how key business decisions are made - a critical foundation for growth and investment.
FAQs
Open allNo. It usually excludes fraud, bad faith, or gross negligence. Coverage applies only when actions are taken in good faith within the scope of duties.
Founders, directors, executive officers, and sometimes key advisors.
Yes, but selectively. While ROFR and co-sale rights are often more about governance than daily use, they remain an important safety net for investors.
Yes. Founders often negotiate carve-outs for estate planning transfers, gifts, or small private sales.
ROFR gives the company or investors the right to buy shares before outsiders. Co-sale rights let investors “tag along” and sell their shares alongside a selling shareholder.
Yes. They can include sunset provisions or be amended in later financing rounds to reflect shifts in ownership or company maturity.
Not always. Negotiated terms often leave founders with meaningful board representation, though investors usually gain at least one seat and sometimes an independent director.
It works alongside the Investor Rights Agreement, ROFR and Co-Sale Agreement, and SPA to create a complete governance framework.
Founders, major investors, and sometimes key employees sign the Voting Agreement as part of a priced equity round.
Yes. Founders can negotiate reporting frequency, pro rata thresholds, and board seat limits to ensure rights are appropriate for the company’s stage.
Registration rights only come into play if the company goes public. They give investors the right to sell their shares in the IPO or subsequent offerings.
The SPA governs the actual purchase of shares, while the IRA governs post-investment rights like information access, pro rata participation, and registration rights.
Not usually. Most rights are limited to “major investors” who meet certain thresholds, preventing administrative complexity from smaller shareholders.
Yes. Some SPAs allow staged investments or additional closings if investors commit to fund in tranches.
If misstatements are discovered, investors may have indemnification claims, meaning the company (or founders in some cases) could be liable.
Yes, all participating investors sign the SPA, along with the company. It governs the purchase of shares in that financing round.
The term sheet is a non-binding summary of key deal points. The SPA is the binding agreement that formalizes the transaction and contains detailed legal terms.
Seed-stage caps often fall between $3M and $10M, but terms vary widely depending on market conditions, industry, and company traction.
Low caps can create significant dilution when notes or SAFEs convert, especially if the company grows rapidly before a priced round.

