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Insights
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 allInvestors who feel informed and engaged are more likely to participate in follow-on rounds and make introductions to new investors.
Investor relations cover all investors, while board management focuses on directors who have governance authority. Both require structured communication.
Monthly or quarterly is standard. The key is consistency and clarity.
They don’t change the headline valuation but impact founder dilution and investor returns. This makes it critical to understand the full term sheet, not just the valuation number.
Traction is one of the strongest drivers. Revenue, user growth, and customer engagement make valuations more defensible.
Not always. An inflated valuation can create problems in later rounds if you can’t meet growth expectations, leading to down rounds.
It depends on your stage. Early-stage investors rely more on methods like Berkus and Scorecard, while later-stage investors lean on DCF and comps.
Send a thank-you email, provide requested info, and share milestone updates. Respectful persistence is better than silence.
No. Experienced investors expect risks. Addressing them openly with mitigation strategies shows maturity and builds trust.
Most initial meetings run 30–45 minutes. Your pitch should take 10–15 minutes, leaving the rest for questions.
A pitch deck, a one-pager, and your cap table are usually enough. Financial models and product demos are useful for follow-ups.
By documenting approvals, following bylaws, and keeping communication open with both the board and shareholders. A decision matrix can help prevent disputes.
No. The board of directors has ultimate authority over major corporate decisions. Founders who ignore board approval requirements risk invalidating decisions and breaching fiduciary duties. The best approach is collaboration and transparency with the board.
Protective provisions are special rights negotiated by investors - usually preferred shareholders - that give them veto power over key corporate actions like mergers or issuing new stock.
Investors typically negotiate board seats at the Series A stage or later, once institutional capital is involved.
Not necessarily. Many founders keep advisors in an informal capacity or through an advisory agreement rather than granting them board seats.
Most early-stage boards start with 3 members, expanding to 5 or 7 as the company grows.
If you incorporate as a C-corporation, yes. An LLC may not require one, but corporations legally must have a board.

