Disclaimer: The following article contains practical advice that in no way represents actual legal counsel. Intended entrepreneurial recipients should consult an attorney at their own risk. Failure to comply may result in loss of productivity and/or financial resources.
The main reason you hire a lawyer is to limit your exposure to risk. Ask one lawyer a question, get three opinions and two referrals. Give a lawyer two options, get a third. None of which inches you any closer to moving forward with the task at hand, which for a tech founder inevitably entails taking on gobs and gobs of unruly risk. Just as there’s no definitively correct way to design a website or write a blog post, there’s no one right way to structure an agreement. In fact, there are limitless options that will each change your risk profile in different ways, possibly alienating investors, vendors and partners in equally varied kind. Lawyers have a talent for making documents larger by making bank accounts smaller. Big documents raise red flags. Small bank accounts raise red arrows. A simple task becomes overly complicated. There’s nothing nimble about a bunch of lawyers bloating an agreement – delaying product development and marketing initiatives to instead stress over minutiae unlikely to be encountered in the near term, if at all. Approach legal issues like a minimum viable product. Keep it simple. Go with your gut. Evolve periodically.
Lawyers have a tendency to hijack uncomfortable conversations. Once one side of a dispute decides they no longer possess the ability or inclination to represent their interests, the debate shifts from a short-list of differences to uncovering every possible issue hour-by-billable-hour. Lawyers love talking to other lawyers, because it means they’re making money. Through perpetually raising new concerns, lawyers build dependency by making clients feel naïve to the limitless ways things can and will go wrong. Another disagreement rears its head. Another phone call to the lawyer. Another bill. A vicious cycle. Who’s running this company anyway? I won’t insult Tech.li readers by redundantly pointing out that lawyers are expensive. Instead, a warning about the ‘free’ legal services of your friend or relative: Free legal help just leads to paid legal help. It’s not their fault. Lawyers are trained to over-complicate even the most vanilla of matters, which is a slippery slope leading directly to their colleague’s office ledger. Take control of your business by using publicly available language to fulfill the majority of legal paperwork. Contracts are just a piece of paper detailing your obligations. Not something to be scared of. If you end up in court, it will be because somebody didn’t hold up their end of the deal at a high level, and lawyers will get their payday if you decide the disagreement merits the expense, which is actually a victory in a way, because it means you’ve created some value. Until then, save your money.
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