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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.
Case Studies
"Love working with the team!"
"Love working with the team!"
Careit needed a well-drafted Stock Purchase Agreement to support a critical equity transaction and keep its cap table clean and compliant. @VirtualCounsel made the process enjoyable and collaborative—delivering a polished agreement that reflected the company's needs and gave the team confidence in the transaction.

"Fantastic help - quick, clear, and made it easy for me to understand."

"Fantastic help - quick, clear, and made it easy for me to understand."
Green Spark Group needed to cut through and understand business licensing and industry-specific regulations before it could operate with confidence. @VirtualCounsel provided quick, clear, and practical guidance that made technical regulatory questions easy to understand and act on. With the compliance picture clarified, Green Spark Group could focus on building its business without regulatory uncertainty hanging overhead.
“@VC came in at a really critical time.
They actually ended up serving as a role of sales enablement by being a partner that can react quickly and get us the right kind of agreements in place with big enterprises.”
“@VC came in at a really critical time.
They actually ended up serving as a role of sales enablement by being a partner that can react quickly and get us the right kind of agreements in place with big enterprises.”
Bench Talent Cloud needed a legal partner that could keep up with its pivots, product advancements, and enterprise deal flow without slowing the business down. @VirtualCounsel stepped in as fractional General Counsel, handling SaaS agreements, MSA/SOWs, fundraising, cap table management, and even enabling enterprise sales by getting the right agreements in place fast.
@VC also represented Fulcrum Workforce Solutions (our original client) through a strategic merger with Open Assembly to create the technological powerhouse that is Bench Talent Cloud. Today, Bench has a seasoned legal team in its corner and a business that continues to grow.

“We're a tech startup, so we don't have the luxury of finding out what we owe in legal fees at the end of the month based on an email or phone call we didn't know about. So having a consistent retainer that we can really trust in, depend on, and make budgeting decisions based off of is huge. I honestly have had the best experience working with @VirtualCounsel. Not just the predictability of payments, but more so the level of service has been above and beyond any service-based company I have ever worked with. "

“We're a tech startup, so we don't have the luxury of finding out what we owe in legal fees at the end of the month based on an email or phone call we didn't know about. So having a consistent retainer that we can really trust in, depend on, and make budgeting decisions based off of is huge. I honestly have had the best experience working with @VirtualCounsel. Not just the predictability of payments, but more so the level of service has been above and beyond any service-based company I have ever worked with. "
Vessel was scaling a health tech startup but couldn't afford the unpredictability of traditional legal billing or the gaps that come without dedicated counsel. @VirtualCounsel became its fractional General Counsel, delivering support across fundraising, FDA analysis, SaaS agreements, cap table management, and more, all on a consistent, trustworthy subscription. Today, Vessel budgets with confidence and grows with a legal partner that has consistently gone above and beyond.
FAQs
Open allBoth are common at the earliest stages. SAFEs are simpler and don’t carry interest or maturity dates, making them easier for founders. Convertible notes function as short-term debt and may be preferred by some investors who want added protection. Either way, model the impact on dilution before signing.
- Pre-money valuation: The company’s value before new capital is added.
- Post-money valuation: The company’s value after adding new capital. For example, a $10M pre-money valuation with $2M raised results in a $12M post-money valuation. Ownership percentages are calculated using the post-money figure.
Enough to hit meaningful milestones that will position you for the next round. For most pre-seed and seed companies, that means 12–18 months of runway. Avoid raising “as much as possible” — overcapitalization leads to unnecessary dilution and pressure.
No. Many great businesses are bootstrapped or funded through revenue. Venture capital is best suited for companies chasing large markets and rapid growth. If your business can thrive without outside capital, you retain more control and ownership.
You’re ready to raise when you have clear evidence of progress — whether that’s a working MVP, early customer traction, or revenue growth. Raising too early, without proof points, often leads to rejection or unfavorable terms.
It depends on the jurisdiction. Some states (like California) ban most non-competes, while others enforce them only if narrowly tailored in scope and duration. A safer approach is to rely on confidentiality and non-solicitation clauses, which are more broadly enforceable.
Not necessarily. Equity is a powerful incentive, but it should be allocated strategically. Early hires often receive equity, while later hires may receive market-rate salaries with smaller or no equity grants. What matters most is aligning compensation with company stage and employee contribution.
Misclassification can trigger back taxes, wage penalties, benefits liability, and lawsuits. Regulators look at the reality of the relationship, not the contract label. If a worker acts like an employee - taking direction, working set hours, or performing core functions - they probably are one in the eyes of the law.
Yes. While not legally required for very small teams, a handbook sets expectations, communicates policies, and helps protect against legal claims. As soon as a startup hires beyond a handful of people, a simple but tailored handbook becomes a best practice.
Contracts should be revisited whenever your business model, regulations, or relationships change. As a rule of thumb, review key agreements annually. For privacy policies and TOS, updates may be required more frequently to stay compliant with evolving laws like GDPR and CCPA.
At a minimum, most startups need:
- NDAs for protecting confidential information.
- Employment/contractor agreements with IP assignment clauses.
- Customer contracts (sales, SaaS, or licensing).
Terms of Service and Privacy Policy for digital products. Additional contracts like MSAs, vendor agreements, and partnership agreements become essential as the company grows.
Templates are a useful starting point, but rarely sufficient on their own. Every deal has unique elements - scope, payment, IP, liability - that need tailoring. Using a template without legal review risks leaving out critical protections or including terms that don’t fit your situation.
Yes. Trust is important, but contracts provide clarity and prevent misunderstandings. Even well-intentioned partners can recall terms differently months later. A contract protects both sides and preserves the relationship by setting expectations upfront.
Use original objectives and metrics (revenue growth, cost synergies, retention, integration milestones) to measure success over 12–36 months.
Advisors help structure the deal, manage process, run auctions, negotiate, draft agreements, coordinate diligence, and maintain alignment between parties.
It depends on structure (asset vs stock), parties’ jurisdictions, use of tax elections (e.g. 338), and deferred consideration. Always engage tax counsel early.
Yes - when buyer and seller disagree on future projections, partial payments may be contingent on performance (revenue, EBITDA) after closing.
That depends on negotiated terms: you might roll over equity, receive a new role (e.g. leadership, board seat), or exit entirely. Clarify this in the agreement.
By creating an integration plan early (even during diligence), having a dedicated integration team, defining workstreams and metrics, maintaining communications, and monitoring synergy progress vs forecast.
Include conditions precedent in the agreement (deal contingent on approvals). Also negotiate termination rights, refund or break-up fees, and fallback structure planning.





