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Business Law: 5 Essentials for Non-Compete Agreements
Well-crafted employment documents can protect your company from
losing employees to the competition.
By Nina L. Kaufman, Esq
You've built a company. You've
created valuable intellectual property, and you have a great stable
of solid clients. You need employees to move the business forward,
but the last thing you want to do is spend valuable time and money
training your competitor--which is what a former employee has the
potential to become after leaving your employ.
How can you protect your company?
Through the careful use of non-compete agreements.
Why careful? Non-compete
agreements need to be worded carefully because their basic purpose
is to prevent a departing employee from working. Or, at least, from
working in any capacity that's the same or similar to what she was
doing for you.
Courts (and the laws of your
state) try to balance two perspectives. They want to reconcile the
company's need for protection with an employee's need to obtain
alternative gainful employment. Become too extreme in your wording
(e.g., telling a file clerk he can't work for a competing company
anywhere in your state for five years after leaving your employ) and
a court will strike down your non-compete.
Yes, you can come straight out and
say "you can't work for a competitor." That's the traditional form
of non-compete. There are also a handful of other ways to prevent
competition:
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Non-solicitation agreements.
These kinds of provisions prevent employees from reaching out to
your client and customer base (a fertile source of leads for the
competition). They can also be worded to prevent former
employees from poaching your current staff, luring them away to
work for a competitor.
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Confidentiality and
non-disclosure agreements. These ensure that any trade secrets
your employee learns on the job stay with the company. They
define the kinds of records and information deemed confidential
and prevent the employee from disclosing them to a competitor or
otherwise. The information really has to be proprietary, though.
Don't include public information--like a client list on your
website--in your definition of confidential. It won't fly.
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Work-for-hire agreements.
Generally, intellectual property belongs to the person who
created it. But not if you have a written work-for-hire
provision. These terms ensure that ownership of any documents,
software, inventions, concepts--anything--that an employee
created on the job remains with your company. In other words,
the employee was hired to create the work for you, not for her
own purposes.
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Incentive compensation
agreements. For companies that offer their employees bonuses,
stock options or the like, your incentive compensation agreement
ensures "loyalty through golden handcuffs." For example, you can
tie bonus entitlement to remaining with the company for a
certain period of time (sometimes referred to as vesting). You
can also allow an employee to keep a bonus, provided he doesn't
defect to a competitor within a certain time frame (if he does,
he has to repay it).
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Employment manuals. Employee
manuals (also known as handbooks or codes of conduct) provide a
handy place--other than a separate written agreement--to bring
all of your non-compete expectations to the attention of
employees. And that way, you don't have so many individual
agreements floating about. Many employers use the manuals to
explain, "This is how we do things here, and this is what will
get you booted out the door." Because trade secrets can be
shared so easily by electronic means, it also provides the
company with a vehicle to express its communications policies.
That includes the scope of permissible blogging by employees,
especially if the blogging has anything to do with the company.
Make sure your employees sign a form stating that they received
and have read the manual.
These agreements and provisions
require delicate wording. In other words, "Don't try this at home."
Find an experienced employment attorney to work with your company.
The wrong wording could make all the difference between protection
and exposure.
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© 2004-2010 The Legal Edge LLC. Nina L.
Kaufman, Esq. is an award-winning business attorney, author,
and speaker. Under her Ask The Business Lawyer umbrella,
Nina offers easy-to-understand business law resources that
protect small businesses and save them money. To learn more,
and receive our FREE "LexAppeal" ezine, visit
http://www.GreatBusinessLawTips.com or contact
Contact Us. This article is for your
general information only. Be sure to consult with an
attorney regarding your particular situation to make sure
you get the specific advice you need. |
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Nina Kaufman, Esq.
Award Winning Business Lawyer, Author & Speaker |

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