Resources for insight and
inspiration
Guides
Insights
Memorandums of Understanding (MOUs): Clarity Without Commitment
In early startup partnerships or exploratory projects, you might not be ready for a full contract - but you still need alignment. A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) provides a way to set expectations without creating binding obligations.
Letters of Intent (LOIs): What Founders Need to Know Before the Deal
Startups often move fast - but when you're courting investors, buyers, or major customers, you need to slow down just long enough to sign a Letter of Intent (LOI). It’s not a binding contract (usually), but it lays the groundwork for one - and sets the tone for the entire deal.
SaaS Agreements Demystified: Legal Must-Knows for Software Startups
If your startup delivers software in the cloud, your SaaS Agreement isn’t just legal fine print - it’s the foundation of your customer relationships. The terms you set now will define your revenue model, limit your risks, and help you scale into larger deals.
FAQs
Open allFailing to use written agreements. Without NDAs and IP assignments, contractors or employees may legally claim ownership of information you thought was protected.
General skills and experience can move with an employee. But specific confidential information, such as code, strategies, or customer lists, is protected and cannot legally be taken.
Patents require public disclosure and registration, granting exclusive rights for a limited time. Trade secrets remain private and last indefinitely - as long as secrecy is maintained.
No. Unlike patents or trademarks, trade secrets are protected automatically if they meet legal requirements and you take reasonable steps to safeguard them.
It depends on your business. Most startups should prioritize trademarks for brand protection and copyrights for code and content. Patents make sense if you’ve built a unique, defensible innovation.
They may own the copyright or patent rights to what they create, even if you paid for it. Always require a signed assignment agreement.
Sometimes. Pure software code is protected by copyright, but certain software-related inventions (like unique algorithms or processes) may qualify for patents if they meet patent standards.
No. Trademarks gain limited protection through use, and copyrights exist automatically upon creation. But registration strengthens your rights and makes enforcement much easier.
Yes. Contractors often have access to sensitive information and customer relationships, so including a non-solicit in contractor agreements is recommended.
A non-solicit limits poaching of employees or customers, while a non-compete prevents someone from working for a competitor. Courts generally view non-solicits as more reasonable.
A typical duration is 12–18 months. Longer restrictions are more likely to be challenged in court.
Not always. Most states allow them if reasonable, but California restricts employee-related non-solicits. Customer-focused non-solicits may still be enforceable in certain cases.
No. Non-competes should be used cautiously, only in states where they’re enforceable and for roles where they are truly necessary. Otherwise, focus on enforceable alternatives.
Not necessarily. Strong confidentiality and invention assignment agreements often provide more reliable protection for IP and trade secrets.
A non-compete restricts where someone can work, while a non-solicitation clause only prevents them from taking your clients or employees. The latter is generally easier to enforce.
No. Some states, like California, ban them outright. Others only enforce them if they’re narrow and justified by a legitimate business interest.
Templates are a good starting point but rarely cover the specific needs of your business. Customized agreements reduce risk and ensure compliance with state and federal laws.
You may face IRS penalties, back taxes, unpaid benefits, wage claims, and potential lawsuits. States like California impose strict penalties for misclassification.
No. Independent contractors are responsible for their own benefits, insurance, and tax obligations unless you choose to offer additional perks in the contract.
Not entirely. The classification depends on how the work is structured. If you control when, how, and where they work, they’re likely an employee, even if the agreement calls them a contractor.

