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Insights

NDAs 101 for Startups: Protecting Your Ideas with the Right Agreement

Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs) are one of the most common contracts founders encounter - and one of the most misunderstood. They’re often signed quickly, but a poorly drafted NDA can leave your startup’s ideas, code, or confidential data exposed.

Open Source Licenses and Software: What Startup Founders Should Know

Open source software powers much of today’s tech - offering speed, flexibility, and huge cost savings. But for startups, using open source without understanding the licenses behind it can lead to real legal risk.

Startup Best Practices for Data Privacy: Build Trust from Day One

In today’s digital world, data privacy isn’t optional - it’s strategic. Whether you’re collecting emails, tracking app usage, or handling sensitive customer info, how you manage personal data can make or break your startup’s credibility.

GDPR for Startups: The Basics Every Founder Should Know

If your startup collects personal data - even just an email address - the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) may apply to you. And yes, this can be true even if you’re not based in Europe.

Yes, through acceleration provisions - often triggered by acquisitions or termination without cause.

Unvested shares are actual stock subject to vesting, while options are simply the right to purchase shares in the future.

Yes, in most cases unvested shares come with full voting privileges. Options, however, do not.

Yes, employees technically own unvested shares, but the company retains the right to repurchase them if the employee leaves before vesting.

Not always. While acceleration is common, especially at the executive level, it must be specifically negotiated and documented in the equity agreement.

Yes. Founders, executives, and employees can all negotiate acceleration clauses, though terms often vary by role and seniority.

It ensures employees remain motivated and engaged after an acquisition, protecting company value and reducing turnover risk.

Single trigger accelerates vesting upon one event, such as an acquisition, while double trigger requires both an acquisition and a termination without cause.

No. Vesting schedules can also apply to contractors, advisors, and executives who receive equity compensation under the company’s equity incentive plan.

Yes. While time-based vesting is standard, many startups use performance-based or hybrid structures to align equity with specific goals or milestones.

A cliff ensures employees demonstrate commitment and cultural fit before receiving ownership. It also protects the company from granting equity to short-term hires.

The standard structure is a four-year schedule with a one-year cliff, followed by monthly or quarterly vesting for the remaining equity.

Ideally at incorporation. Waiting too long can create dilution challenges and complicate negotiations with investors.

An EIP can include stock options, restricted stock, RSUs, and other equity-based awards, giving flexibility to tailor compensation.

Yes. Even small teams benefit from setting aside equity early. Without one, you risk complications in hiring, fundraising, and future compliance.

Most early-stage startups set aside 10–20% of total equity, but the right size depends on your growth plan, hiring needs, and investor input.

Yes. A larger pool can dilute per-share value, which impacts how acquisition proceeds are distributed among shareholders and option holders.

Founders can negotiate for vesting acceleration, retention bonuses, or favorable conversion terms to ensure employees benefit from the deal.

Not always. Depending on the agreement, unvested options may continue vesting, accelerate, or be canceled and replaced with new grants.

Option pools may either remain under the existing plan with the same vesting schedules or be converted into the acquiring company’s plan under a conversion ratio.

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