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Starting a Business - Why Incorporate?

One of the first steps for starting a business is to incorporate your new company. Organizing a legal entity like a corporation or a limited liability company (LLC) can be a smart choice for an independent contractor, home based business operator or an entrepreneur starting a small business with employees and infrastructure.

Forming and operating under the appropriate legal business entity can help reduce risk and potential personal liability of the founders, by legally defining and separating business from personal assets. Incorporating a business can help protect the contractor or entrepreneur’s personal property, like a home, from the liabilities of the business, which can be considerable.

Now you can incorporate your business for free with RocketLawyer.com -- with no processing fees! Visit www.rocketlawyer.com/incorporateforfree to get your free incorporation.

Freya A. Shoffner, pictured above, is a business lawyer in Boston, Massachusetts. Her specialities include entity selection for small businesses. If you need help with choosing the right business entity, or have other legal questions about setting up your new company, find a business lawyer in your area today.

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Reading Contracts: What Am I Missing?

Find out what your business contract really says. Guest contributor Jay S. Parkhill
shares his method for reading contracts.

One of the hardest things to do when reading a new contract is to figure out what is not covered. The sea of words in a long document can prevent readers from noticing, for example, that a license agreement provides a nonexclusive, worldwide, perpetual license, but doesn't say clearly whether the license fee must be paid and once paid whether it must be periodically renewed.

The best way to be sure a contract contains all the terms one needs is to do the same type of transaction over and over until you know it cold. Next best is to find someone else to rely on. Those aren't particularly helpful suggestions to someone in unfamiliar territory with a deal on the line, though, so here are some suggestions to help identify missing terms.

Make up a Hit List. Before you start reading, write down list of the important terms. This step takes a surprising amount of mental discipline but it is incredibly important. Avoid the temptation to dive straight in and "see what the contract says". Even if you think you know what terms you need, write them down before you start reading.

Take the contract in Sections. This goes along with my blog piece on How to Read a License Agreement. Instead of reading front-to-back, search the contract to find all the terms on your hit list. Do they match your requirements? Is anything from your list missing? Bonus points for lining up your hit list in one column on a piece of paper and writing down the comparable terms from the contract in the next column. I have only taken this extra step a handful of times, but found it very helpful when the deal was complex or I was having a hard time getting through the contract language.

Put it Back Together. Now that you have found the biggest points, you can read through and see how other terms flow around them. Do all the defined terms match your understanding of what they should be? Do any subparagraphs under one of the big points limit its applicability?Try to break it. It's also easy to read a sentence, squint a bit and say "yeah, that basically covers it". Instead of trying to read the contract in a way that fits your needs, do the opposite. How could a paragraph be read against you? E.g. if you quit vs. being terminated by your employer, will you lose any vesting in your stock?

Read with a Friend. If the deal is important it merits more than one set of eyes. I frequently find that useful points come out of discussion with a co-reader.

Search for Exemplars. I am putting this last because it's really hard to find good examples of many types of agreements. The SEC's EDGAR database is a good source, but search is very limited unless you pay for advanced search capabilities. RocketLawyer.com has an extensive list of business legal forms.

I hope these ideas are helpful. Reading carefully and catching everything is a genuinely hard task. Practice very much makes perfect and these are some of my favorite practice tools.

Jay S. Parkhill is a corporate securities and licensing partner at Virtual Law Partners LLP in San Francisco. If you need help with business legal contracts, RocketLaywer.com makes it easy to find a business lawyer who can help.

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Confidentiality Agreements Protect Your Business

If you're a business operator, confidentiality agreements can protect your valuable business assets. Guest contributor Andrew Thompson explains when and how to use these essential legal documents.

A Confidentiality Agreement is created when a user ("Recipient") agrees to preserve confidentiality relating to proprietary information ( "Confidential Information") obtained from the owner of the Confidential Information.

There are many situations in which a Confidentiality Agreement may be useful. Think of an arrangement between a small, but growing manufacturing company, and a marketing or IT firm. The manufacturer is likely to have formulas, processes and other information it would like to share only with the companies it establishes relationships with to help grow its business further. Often the information relating to these processes and formulas is among the company's most valuable assets.

A Confidentiality Agreement should make clear the relationship the parties have with each other. It should do this by identifying the line of business each party is engaged in and the purposes for which they have established their relationship.

The agreement should carefully identify the information that is expected to be held in confidence and the uses for which the recipient is permitted to use the information. It should be bounded in time and space as well as in purpose.

The agreement should typically make it clear that the recipient is being granted a limited license to use the information and that is the extent of the agreement. It's a good idea to place limits around which employees of the recipient who may access or use the information as well.

The information owner may wish to provide for remedies in the event of a breach of confidentiality, including money damages, injunctive protection, attorneys' fees and appropriate indemnifications.

Like nearly every agreement, a Confidentiality Agreement should be executed (signed) by all parties. The effective date will either be the date of execution or the date specified in the agreement itself.

Visit RocketLawyer.com today to create a Confidentiality Agreement or to find a business lawyer to protect the integrity of your confidential information.

Andrew Thompson practices business law in Indianapolis, Indiana.

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