“Looking for A Lawyer? Choose wisely, your business is at stake,” says Louis Lehot from L2 Counsel

“Looking for A Lawyer? Choose wisely, your business is at stake,” says Louis Lehot from L2 Counsel

By Louis Lehot at L2 Counsel

Choosing the right lawyer that fits your business is one of the most important steps you can take in today’s litigious world. Whether you are launching a new venture, pivoting to reposition your current business, or have a “bet the company” challenge or opportunity, finding the lawyer that fits your unique situation is critical.

Sometimes, the best lawyer for you is the person you have known for years. He/she returns your calls promptly, and has your best interest at heart. Other times, a referral from a trusted third party may be right for your situation. Whatever your situation and legal requirements, the right lawyer may be a different person at the formation of your start-up from when your company changes direction or scales to larger size. Ask yourself, am I partnered with an attorney who can help my business grow to the next level, or fix the legal issues in the foreseeable future?

Your need for a lawyer that fits your unique business starts early on in the process, well before you conceive your idea and pitch it to your friends and family, other technologists, investors, team members and customers. Asking the right questions is key.

What sort of entity is right for the business? Where should you incorporate? Should you establish an LLC, C corp, S corp, partnership or sole proprietorship?

How you set up your capital structure will matter more as time goes on. With each round of capital that you raise, you are diluted, and the stakes get higher. What you do at the outset may well determine the ultimate reckoning when you go to sell your company. How should you capitalize your business? How should you evidence the capital that is put into the business? Is it for common stock, is it for a convertible note? What is a SAFE or a KISS? What are the terms of this security? What are the relative rights between you and your co-founders and angel investors? Your venture capital investors? How much stock should you grant for a CTO or a CEO? How much for a CFO? How much for a new head of sales?

Even before you capitalize your business, how will you protect the intellectual property that is created? Have you filed a provisional patent application? Do you need a trademark or copyright? What sort of trade secret protections do you need? When should you put these protections in place? Do you need a domain name that matches your trademark? Is it available? What about a logo?

Just as you would not see an oncologist for a heart condition, so there are different types of lawyers for different types of problems… How to make sense of it all? Following are important considerations that I think every entrepreneur should consider before engaging counsel to ensure the best fit for the problem to be solved.

Bandwidth & Availability

Your lawyer should respond to your emails and phone calls promptly and should have a team that can service your matters on demand. Your preliminary interactions should demonstrate this. Ask, who is working on my account, and how do I reach them?Your lawyer should be available to meet with you in person or on the phone, as needed, and at a cadence to suit your budget.

Experience

You want your lawyer to be well known within the industry, to have formed hundreds of new startups, and helped them obtain financing, achieve revenue, enabled scaling and brought them to exit, whether via IPO or sale. An experienced lawyer will also have seen her fair share of business failures, and will steer you clear of obvious pitfalls in the journey.

The right attorney for your business will have expertise and experience relevant to the prevailing industry and environment that you hope to operate in. If you plan to disrupt an industry with brand new technology, your attorney should be eager to dive in head first and immerse herself in what regulatory pitfalls might lie ahead, what statutes exist or could be created, what are the risks, where is the upside, and how to optimize your chances for success.

Network

Just as no single doctor could solve every medical problem you may encounter, no one lawyer will have every expertise. Your lawyer should, however, have a deep network of colleagues who can solve most of the legal problems your company may encounter. She should know the investor community that invests in your geography, in your industry vertical and at your stage of growth. Ideally, your lawyer also can demonstrate a network of non-legal talent that you will need, from accountants to financial professionals to engineers. Ideally, your lawyer will have clients and connections with businesses in adjacent verticals and in your geography.

Your lawyer should be recognized by people you know, her peers, or organizations you recognize as having some combination of knowledge, acumen, experience and network to help you know that your business will be in expert legal hands.

Clients of your relative size and stage of growth

Whether your company is at ideation, formation, hypergrowth stage or getting ready for exit, your lawyer should have experience in serving companies with your problem set.

· At the startup stage, you need more advice than at any other time, just when you have no money, and your lawyer will need to know how to get you what you need efficiently, helping you minimize cash outflows, spending legal dollars only where it counts. Most problems should be solved with three-to-five bullets of one-line answers, not multi-page legal memos. Your lawyer should have access to technology-enabled vendors and solutions so you can self-help as much as possible.

· At financing stage, your lawyer should have a deep network and access to software tools that will help you find investors, while guiding you on the information an investor will expect to see in a financing process.

· At exit stage, your lawyer should be proactively anticipating what a buyer will expect to see in due diligence, and finding and cleaning up messes before they are discovered. Your lawyer should have negotiated against the buyer and their lawyers, or at least similarly situated buyers.



Hicham Jorio

Investor, Founder, and Board Advisor

4y

Louis Lehot Excellent insights

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