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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 allBecause without them, your startup may not legally own its core technology - a major risk in funding, acquisitions, or IPOs.
Generally yes, but enforceability can depend on state law. Some states restrict how broadly employers can claim ownership, so tailoring language matters.
Yes. Contractors often create code, designs, or strategies, and without an agreement, they may legally own the IP.
They serve the same function - assigning inventions to the company and protecting confidentiality. The terminology varies by company or industry.
Yes. Pair NDAs with confidentiality and IP assignment agreements to ensure ownership of work product and protection of sensitive data.
Yes, but courts often scrutinize them. NDAs that are too broad or vague are harder to enforce.
Two to five years is standard. Trade secrets may be protected indefinitely if defined clearly.
Most venture capitalists won’t sign NDAs at the pitch stage. However, some strategic investors or partners may sign if sensitive technical information is involved.
Yes. Even a short policy clarifying what licenses are acceptable and requiring license checks before use can protect your company from major risks.
It depends. Copyleft licenses like AGPL may apply even if you don’t distribute your code. Always check terms before using them in your backend.
You could face legal action, be forced to release your proprietary code, or lose investor confidence. Compliance is critical.
Yes, but it depends on the license. Permissive licenses (like MIT or Apache 2.0) allow it, while copyleft licenses (like GPL) may require you to open source your own code.
Be transparent, respond quickly to user requests, and show that you protect data. Investors and customers reward startups that treat privacy as a priority, not an afterthought.
Not always. Consent is required for marketing emails, cookies, and sensitive data. Other legal bases, like contracts or legitimate interest, may apply.
Start with a clear Privacy Policy and limit the data you collect. These two actions cover many compliance basics and set a strong foundation.
Yes. If you collect data from EU or California residents, you’re subject to their rules—even as a small or pre-revenue startup.
Yes. Early compliance avoids costly fixes later and signals professionalism to investors and customers.
Not always. You can rely on other legal bases like contracts or legitimate interest. But consent is required for marketing emails and cookies.
Fines can reach up to €20 million or 4% of annual global revenue, whichever is higher. Even small startups have been fined for violations.
Yes. If you have users in the EU or monitor EU residents online, GDPR applies regardless of where your company is based.

