Myths about lawyers – and how startups can actually work well with them

The startup ecosystem is an emerging landscape in India, with more and more people joining the entrepreneurship bandwagon with great ideas, innovative products, and advanced technology. The consumers are ready and willing to embrace new products/technology that add value and provide solutions to their daily requirements, and investors are keen on backing entrepreneurs with such products/technology.

In this excitement of gaining traction in terms of developing a marketable product, looking for or raising investment and chalking out monetisation and marketing plans, entrepreneurs often ignore the legal bores! This includes compliances, paperwork, and legalities involved in doing business as such.

The common perception is: Why bother with the legalities of the startup operation now, when the startup is in its nascent stage and the viable product/prototype is not yet market ready? Or the more truthful perception: Why deal with lawyers – the human equivalent of sharks – who will bleed your resources dry and leave you with nothing but a host of incomprehensible legal verbiage and a fat bank statement? Sounds a bit harsh, but in essence this sums up how most lawyers are perceived typically by founders and entrepreneurs in India.

Is the above an accurate perception of how lawyers operate, or just a myth surrounding the legal profession? This will, in most cases, vary depending on the personal experience of individuals. However, in my experience, I have come across at least five common myths associated with my ‘breed’, as described below.

1. Startups don’t need lawyers!

2. Lawyers=huge legal bills

3. Lawyers bury clients with legalese

4. Lawyers are deal breakers

5. Changing dynamics: out of the box thinkers

In this regard, we have a practice for startups where involvement begins at the idea-stage (to understand the legal-commercial feasibility of the idea) and extends to business structure/entity selection (for example, Company (including one person company), LLP or a regular partnership), ongoing compliance (which helps in gaining investor confidence), IP protection, investment support, contracts, mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures and sale of business.

To summarise, startups that ignore the need to retain a lawyer right from the beginning do so at their own peril. Once the startups understand the importance of retaining a good pro-startup lawyer with relevant experience and the ability to think out of the box, the rest is often a considerably smooth sailing exercise.

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