質問
I am negotiating a deal with a friend who is CEO of a small software company about a software system I've created. She is very trustworthy in my eyes and we've known each other for a while.
We have so far agreed on a company with a 51%/49% ownership split in my favor. Her own company will give the new business an initial 16 months contract paying four figures/month. They will also provide customer support when it becomes necessary, some sales people and UX dev guys.
I've written the technology myself but we developed the idea and strategy to turn it into an SaaS business model together. So I contributed the tech but she more or less contributed the idea that turns my tech into a business.
My question is now how to integrate the IP into the business. Should it be in my name? My friend says the IP should be in the name of the company otherwise I could just leave the project hanging if I chose to. I tend towards just following her argument and putting the IP in the company's name, but I'm not a lawyer and I would like to hear a professional opinion. What is usually the best strategy in this situation?
回答: 3 public & 0 非公開
The whole point about corporate ownership is that the IP (eg copyright) can be shown on the books as outcomes on the asset side of the company. But it also has to be balanced, the contract your friend also needs to be documented and possibly put onto the books (whether liability or otherwise unknown as it is tied to a connected investor. So long as there's clarity in how it is managed going forward (eg dilution for additional investors) and channels for conflict resolution then it can be treated like a spin-out as you slowly acquire your own staff and her role dwindles (or else is there a buy-back option if fails? in which case you're the market canary). What your friend is describing are lumped under good/bad leaver provisions. They are a standard startup risk management technique along with vesting cliffs.
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