Build your own high-value legal consultancy, without starting from zero

A faster and more structured way to build your own niche legal business

A new path for ambitious lawyers

Most lawyers spend years building experience, but remain stuck in systems that limit their income, progression and control.

This is a fundamentally different model—designed for lawyers who want to create modern legal businesses of the future.

track record & reputation

Since launching in 2022

We've supported hundreds of new and established SMEs, consultancies and professionals—many award-winning—primarily in the tech, knowledge and professional sectors.

Our clients include businesses led by former professionals from organisations such as Amazon, Gartner, Revolut, EY, Meta and the NHS, as well as entrepreneurs who’ve taken alternative paths.

They operate nationally and internationally, working with clients ranging from small businesses to blue-chip companies, including BCG, Red Bull, OpenAI and PwC.

Trusted by directors across the UK & internationally, since 2022

New vs old legal

Many lawyers feel stuck in their current careers

– Slow progression
– Limited upside
– No real ownership
– Time-for-money

– Legacy structures

Even flexible consultancy platform models can be fickle

The market is shifting faster than ever before

– Changing client expectations
– Commoditisation
– Consolidation

– AI disruption

– Uncertainty

Standing still is now the biggest risk

The New Legal model is built for this shift

– Ownership and autonomy
– Multiple income streams
– A proven structure

– Future-proofing

– Collaboration

A seat at the table and a clear path to Equity Partner

A faster, more structured way to build your legal business

Starting your own legal brand can take years and significant investment

– No reputation

– No systems

– No foundations

By becoming a New Legal franchisee, you're ahead of the game from day one:

– Instant credibility

– Proven growth model

– Full business infrastructure

What that means for you

Step into a proven commercial model and a brand that's on the rise

You’re not starting from nothing. You’re stepping into:

– a trusted, rising brand
– a proven commercial model
– a network of clients and partners

So instead of spending years building credibility, you have it from day one.


And you can focus on building a valuable business—not just doing the work.

Areas of opportunity

Deals &

structuring

Help clients structure deals

Partnerships & joint ventures

M&A & exit planning

Equity & ownership

IP &

technology

Help clients protect & monetise IP

Technology & IP advice

IP licensing monetisation

Trade marks & brand protection

Growth &

operations

Help with support & contracts

On-demand legal counsel

Scalable legal infrastructure

Modern contracts

Global & cross-border

Help clients with global complexity

Cross-border deals & structuring

International IP strategy & licensing

Overseas customers, partners, teams

Disputes &

risk

Help clients stay safe

Disputes & separations

Misuse of IP & information

Contract exits

Talent &

teams

Empower clients' teams

Contractors & IR35

Employment & HR

Incentives & restrictions

How you can earn

Hourly

– Hourly: £195–£395/hour

– Bundles: bespoke

– Retainers: bespoke

Fixed & estimates

– Tier 1: £495–£990

– Tier 2: £1,237.50––£1,980

– Tier 3: £2,475––£4,970 +

Retainers

Develop retainers tailored to your clients, and earn recurring income

Training

Earn from training clients and your peers in the ecosystem

Products

Sell your products to clients and peers in the New Legal ecosystem

Subscriptions

Create your own unique subscription offers for ongoing legal support

How do I make money?

Three main ways:

Consultancy work you deliver

Legal work you originate (even if delivered by others)

Deals and opportunities (fees, revenue share, equity over time)

This allows you to move beyond pure delivery, and start building a business that generates income beyond your own time.

How much can I earn?

Each franchise territory and niche is designed to support a viable, scalable practice.

Your income depends on what you build—the clients you win, the rates you command, and how you structure your work.


We work with you to define a focus that can realistically support your income goals.

We support you to:

– build a strong client base
– refine your positioning and pricing
– increase your rates over time
– create multiple income streams

Some operators aim for £100K.

Others build towards £300K–£500K+ over time.

Your earnings will depend on how you balance:


– your time
– the work you originate
– and how you leverage the support, structure & systems provided

Can I earn from work I don’t personally deliver?

Yes.

If you originate work:

– you can participate commercially

– even if another person delivers it

This is a key difference from traditional models.

What you get

Profile &

positioning

Own your niche

– Your own niche and positioning

– Personal brand support

– Web profile on the New Legal site

Growth & business development

Get growing

– Marketing strategy and execution

– Sales and business development training & support

– Access to partnerships and opportunities

Infrastructure & operations

Operate professionally

– Company setup

– Operational support

– Systems, tools and processes

Tools &

assets

Access docs & tools

– Template bank

– Contracts, clauses & policies

– AI (quoting/drafting)

Legal & specialist support

Access lawyers to support you

– Access to junior, senior and specialist lawyers

– Support on complex matters

– Legal admin support

Your first year

Develop your foundations

Months 1–3

Define

– Define your niche

– Curate your network

– Build your pipeline

Months 4–6

Refine

– Refine your offerings

– Secure clients & partners

– Improve sales & marketing

Months 7–12

Build

– Double down

Increase rates

Ramp up earnings

Is a New Legal franchise right for you?

New Legal is for lawyers who are

(1) New solo consultants (3+ PQE or equivalent) who want to become legal business owners, and do something new and exciting with significant upside potential

(2) Already operating a small or solo consultancy practice and want to bring in new energy, resources and operational support to take your business to new heights under the New Legal brand

Who is this for

(1) Solo lawyer

You're aware of the opportunity to operate as a legal consultant but understand how hard it is to scale a practice on your own.

(2) Consultancy owner

You're already operating a practice and are overwhelmed or facing a plateau or decline and would like a safe pair of hands to help with growth, operations and delivery. We will work with you to develop your role – one that adds the most value – and this differs from person to person.

This could be for you if these apply:

– You want to move from delivery to ownership

– You're motivated by long-term value and stability

– You're ready to take responsibility for your own pipeline and growth

– You enjoy being client-facing

– You want to be involved in the business community

– You'd like to build your own practice

– Want more control and upside

– Enjoy working solo and with others

– You're willing to win work and build relationships

Who this is not for

This is probably not for you if these apply:

– You want to focus purely on technical delivery
– You’re uncomfortable with business development or visibility
– You expect a fully done-for-you pipeline
– You need a guaranteed salary from day one
– You’re not ready to take ownership of outcomes

We don't presently support: family, immigration, litigation, conveyancing law, or any reserved activities

Do I have the right experience?

We operate a unique collaboration model:

You can access senior or junior lawyers to support you

Whether that's for:

– a second opinion or sounding board

– sign-off on documents or advice

– assistance with your workload

Your peers at New Legal are here to support you at every level, at any time.

You're not just acquiring a legal franchise. You're securing your future, starting with trust and credibility today.

Ready to build your very own legal consultancy of the future?

Questions?

Frequently asked questions

Is this a franchise?

Legally, yes – you would purchase a franchise.

Commercially, it’s different*

*SUMMARY

(1) It’s designed as a high-end, partner-track franchise model designed for the legal space, not a typical “off-the-shelf” franchise.

(2) You start as a licensee during an initial period so that you and us can decide if there's a fit

(3) After that if we both agree to proceed, you would become a Franchise Partner

Contact us for more info >

What kind of lawyers is this for?

Typically:

– 2–8 PQE (or equivalent experience)

– commercially minded

– frustrated with traditional firms

– aware of shortfalls of consultancy platforms

– motivated to build something

More important than PQE is mindset:

– willing to build relationships

– willing to generate work

– want ownership and upside

Do I need to bring clients with me?

No, but you can.

You’ll have the opportunity (and support) to:

– build your own pipeline

– develop relationships

– generate opportunities

You’re supported with:

– business development

– personal brand

– marketing

– training

– systems

How do I make money?

Three main ways:

Consultancy work you deliver

Legal work you originate (even if delivered by others)

Deals and opportunities (fees, profit share, equity over time)

This is not just about billing your time.

Can I earn from work I don’t personally deliver?

Yes.

If you originate work:

– you can participate commercially

– even if another person delivers it

This is a key difference from traditional models.

What support do I get?

You’re supported with:

– personal brand and niche positioning

– marketing and content

– business development guidance

– training and playbooks

– access to partners

– specialist support across practice areas

– junior or senior support

We operate together.

What is the partnership track?

Typically:

Year 1: build your practice

Once you hit clear, agreed milestones: become Partner

Then, once further agreed milestones are hit, progress to Equity Partner

This is based on:

– performance

– pipeline

– commercial contribution

What makes this different from consultant platforms?

Consultant models give freedom—but often:

– no real support

– no growth engine

– limited upside beyond your own work

This model combines the best of all models:

– ownership

– autonomy with structure

– support

– partnership and equity pathway

Who provides me with legal support?

Junior and senior lawyers working with New Legal

– Some lawyers operate entirely by themselves

– Others need support from us to help with different elements of service delivery

– We provide the kind of support you need to operate your practice safely and profitably

– We provide support centrally and via partners

Is this right for me?

Who this is for

Lawyers who want to build their own practice.

– Want more control and upside

– Willing to win work and build relationships

– Think commercially

Who this is not for

– Anyone not willing to invest in themselves

– Anyone not willing to embrace change

– Looking for a salary from day one

– Want work handed to you

– Prefer not to do business development

Do I have the right experience?

We operate the unique sandwich model:

Seniors above. Juniors below.

Whether that's for:

– a second opinion or sounding board

– sign-off on documents or advice

– assistance with your workload

Your peers at New Legal are here to support you at every level, at any time.

Can I stay solo or do I need to grow my team?

You're welcome to do either.

The model allows for you to subcontract to your peers so you don't have to take on your own team.

As the workload increases your role will evolve and we can support with overflow and specialist work as needed.

Examples of how we help clients

Case Studies

Often the work we do includes an element of commercial, IP, data and/or employment/HR

Case Study: Shareholders’ Agreement (50/50) for a Management Consultancy Business (UK)

Case Study: Shareholders’ Agreement (50/50) for a Management Consultancy Business (UK)

April 05, 202611 min read

New Legal structured and implemented a bespoke Shareholders’ Agreement for a management consultancy business operated by two director–shareholders with 50/50 ownership.

At inception, the business operated with informal alignment between founders, without a formal legal framework governing control, ownership, or exit. This created a high-trust environment, but one lacking the structural protections required to support scale, investment readiness, and long-term stability.


Risk Position (No Shareholders’ Agreement)

In the absence of a shareholders’ agreement, the business was exposed to a range of structural risks: decision-making could become gridlocked due to the 50/50 ownership split with no deadlock mechanism; either founder could transfer shares or disengage without restriction, introducing misaligned or governance and ownership risk; intellectual property was not clearly assigned to the company, creating value leakage risk; and there were no enforceable leaver provisions, meaning a departing founder could retain full economic upside regardless of circumstances. Additionally, the lack of non-compete and non-solicit protections exposed the business to loss of clients, team, and goodwill.


Result (Post-Agreement Implementation)

Following implementation, the business transitioned to a controlled and enforceable ownership structure, where decision-making is governed by defined consent thresholds and supported by a formal deadlock resolution mechanism; equity is tightly managed through transfer restrictions and internal pre-emption rights; intellectual property is fully centralised within the company; and founder behaviour is aligned through a clear good leaver / bad leaver framework with economic consequences. Combined with enforceable restrictive covenants and governance processes, this creates a structure that preserves upside alignment while actively mitigating downside risk across ownership, control, and long-term value.


Gap Analysis: Before vs After

At inception, the business operated with:

  • informal alignment between founders

  • no structured governance framework

  • no defined exit or dispute mechanisms

  • unclear ownership of intellectual property

  • unrestricted share transfers and limited downside protection

This created a high-trust but high-risk operating environment, particularly given the 50/50 ownership split, where:

  • decision-making could stall

  • disputes had no clear resolution path

  • long-term value (IP, clients, brand) was not legally secured


Before the Agreement

  • Control

    • No formal reserved matters

    • No structured voting thresholds

    • Equal ownership with no deadlock solution

  • Equity & Transfers

    • Shares freely transferable (in practice)

    • No pricing mechanism or internal market

    • No protection against undesirable shareholders

  • Founder Risk

    • No distinction between good vs bad leavers

    • Departing founder could retain full economic upside

    • No forced exit on disengagement or misconduct

  • IP Ownership

    • IP likely held individually or informally

    • No automatic assignment to company

    • Risk of value leakage on founder exit

  • Competition & Conduct

    • No enforceable non-competes or non-solicits

    • Limited protection over clients, team, or brand

  • Dispute Resolution

    • No structured deadlock mechanism

    • Risk of operational paralysis


After the Agreement

  • Control

    • ~80% shareholder consent required for key decisions

    • Formal board structure with defined processes

    • Deadlock mechanism with escalation to exit

  • Equity & Transfers

    • Strict transfer restrictions and pre-emption rights

    • Internal market for shares before third-party sales

    • Board veto on unsuitable buyers

  • Founder Risk

    • Clear Good Leaver / Bad Leaver framework

    • Forced transfer of shares on exit

    • Economic penalties for misconduct or early departure

  • IP Ownership

    • All IP assigned to the company for nominal value (~£1)

    • Covers past, present, and future materials

    • Full enforcement rights centralised

  • Competition & Conduct

    • ~12-month non-compete and non-solicit restrictions

    • Brand and reputation protections

    • Restrictions on hiring team or approaching clients

  • Dispute Resolution

    • Formal deadlock process:

      • negotiation period

      • forced share transfer option

      • ultimate fallback to winding-up


Commercial Framing

This transition moves the business from:

  • informal founder alignment → legally enforceable structure

And from:

  • relationship-based trust → system-based control and protection

Key interpretation:

The agreement converts a fragile 50/50 founder setup into a controlled, enforceable partnership model, where:

  • upside remains shared

  • but downside risk is actively managed through ownership, governance, and exit mechanics

1. Strategic Objective

The agreement is designed to:

  • formalise a 50/50 founder partnership

  • protect long-term IP ownership within the company

  • prevent shareholder misalignment or exit risk

  • enforce active participation by founders

  • maintain tight control over key decisions

Interpretation:

This structure is built to lock in founder alignment while protecting against breakdown scenarios (deadlock, exits, misconduct).


2. Commercial Model

1. Equity Structure

  • ~2,000 ordinary shares issued

  • Two core founders: ~49.5% each

  • Minor holders: ~0.5% each

Commercial implication:

  • Near-equal ownership creates balanced power

  • But also introduces high deadlock risk


2. Value Capture Mechanism

  • No dividends or distributions defined explicitly

  • Value realised via:

    • equity appreciation

    • future sale / exit

    • control of IP and business

Commercial implication:

  • This is a long-term equity value play, not income-driven


3. Transfer Pricing Mechanics

  • Share transfers priced at:

    • Fair Value (via accountant) or

    • Nominal value (in downside scenarios)

Commercial implication:

  • Introduces downside penalties (bad leavers)

  • Protects remaining shareholders from overpaying


3. Operational Engine / Deliverables

The agreement operationalises:

  • Founders act as:

    • directors

    • operators

    • shareholders

  • Governance cadence:

    • minimum 2 formal board meetings per year

    • additional informal meetings as needed

  • Company obligations:

    • maintain accounts (6-month reporting)

    • operate within agreed business scope

    • ensure compliance and insurance

Interpretation:

This effectively turns the founders into:

  • joint operators + governors of the business

  • with minimal bureaucracy but structured oversight


4. Ownership / Rights Structure

IP Ownership (Critical Feature)

  • All IP and materials:

    • assigned to the company for £1 nominal consideration

  • Includes:

    • past work

    • future work

    • jointly created materials

  • Company receives:

    • full ownership

    • enforcement rights

    • power of attorney to complete assignments

Key commercial point:

  • All value creation is centralised in the company

This allows:

  • scalability

  • clean future investment

  • protection against founder departure


Share Ownership

  • Shares are:

    • tightly controlled

    • subject to transfer restrictions

    • bound by compulsory transfer rules


5. Exclusivity / Restrictions

Shareholders are restricted from:

  • competing with the business (during + ~12 months post-exit)

  • soliciting:

    • customers

    • employees

    • suppliers

  • using company branding externally

Commercial purpose:

  • protects:

    • goodwill

    • relationships

    • market position


6. Governance / Control

Reserved Matters (Supermajority Control)

  • ~80% shareholder consent required for:

    • issuing shares

    • major contracts (~£50k+)

    • borrowing (>~£10k)

    • M&A / structural changes

    • IP licensing

Implication:

  • Founders must act jointly on all major decisions


Board Structure

  • No casting vote for chair

  • Equal voting power

Implication:

  • Reinforces true parity

  • Increases likelihood of deadlock


Deadlock Mechanism

If disagreement occurs:

  1. Formal deadlock triggered

  2. ~14-day negotiation period

  3. If unresolved:

    • either party can initiate share transfer process

  4. Fallback:

    • potential company winding-up

Interpretation:

  • Deadlock becomes a forced resolution trigger

  • Pushes parties toward:

    • buyout

    • exit

    • dissolution


7. Risk Protection

Leaver Framework (Highly Structured)

Good Leaver:

  • receives:

    • fair value or nominal (whichever higher)

Bad Leaver:

  • receives:

    • fair value or nominal (whichever lower)

Implications:

  • Strong behavioural incentive

  • Penalises:

    • misconduct

    • early disengagement


Default / Breach Protection

  • Material breach triggers:

    • forced share transfer

    • treated as Bad Leaver

  • Company can:

    • execute transfers on behalf of shareholder


Voting Suspension

  • Leavers / defaulting shareholders:

    • lose voting rights immediately

Commercial purpose:

  • prevents disruption during exit process


8. Termination Structure

Termination scenarios:

  • company dissolution

  • single shareholder ownership

  • ~90% shareholder agreement

Additional rights:

  • forced transfer on:

    • exit

    • breach

    • deadlock

Commercial implication:

  • High liquidity control

  • Founders cannot:

    • hold shares passively

    • block exits indefinitely


9. Strategic Takeaway

  • The structure combines:

    • near-equal founder ownership

    • strict control over shares and transfers

    • centralised IP ownership

    • strong leaver penalties

  • Key dynamics:

    • alignment is enforced through:

      • governance symmetry

      • economic penalties

    • conflict is resolved through:

      • forced transfers or exit mechanisms

  • Risk profile:

    • highly effective if founders cooperate

    • potentially volatile under disagreement

Result:

The agreement creates a high-control, founder-balanced structure where:

  • both parties must collaborate to operate

Structure Overview: Shareholders’ Agreement

(Source: )


1. Definitions & Interpretation

  • Sets out key defined terms used throughout the agreement (e.g. Good Leaver, Bad Leaver, Fair Value, Shares, Business).

  • Establishes how the document should be read (e.g. references to law, writing, persons).

Purpose:

Creates legal clarity and consistency, ensuring all commercial mechanisms (leaver, transfers, valuation) operate precisely.


2. Board of Directors

  • Defines initial directors (the two founders).

  • Allows future appointments with shareholder approval (~80%).

  • Sets board mechanics:

    • no casting vote

    • minimum meeting cadence

    • information rights (agenda, minutes, papers)

Purpose:

Establishes equal governance at board level, reinforcing parity and structured decision-making.


3. Intellectual Property & Proprietary Rights

  • All IP and materials assigned to the company for nominal value (~£1).

  • Covers:

    • pre-existing work

    • future work

  • Includes:

    • moral rights waivers

    • obligation to perfect assignments

    • power of attorney in favour of the company

Purpose:

Centralises all commercial value in the company, preventing IP fragmentation or founder ownership disputes.


4. Matters Requiring Shareholder Consent

  • Key decisions require ~80% shareholder approval.

  • Includes:

    • share issuances

    • major contracts (~£50k+)

    • borrowing (>~£10k)

    • structural changes (M&A, subsidiaries)

    • IP licensing

Purpose:

Creates a supermajority control layer, ensuring major decisions require joint founder alignment.


5. Deadlock

  • Defines when deadlock occurs (e.g. founder disagreement or lack of quorum).

  • Provides escalation:

    • formal notice

    • negotiation period (~14 days)

    • right to trigger share transfer

    • potential winding-up fallback

Purpose:

Introduces a forced resolution mechanism to avoid operational paralysis in a 50/50 structure.


6. Business of the Company

  • Requires shareholders to act in good faith.

  • Obligates the company to:

    • operate properly and legally

    • follow business plans

    • maintain insurance

    • produce management accounts (~6-monthly)

Purpose:

Sets baseline operational discipline and fiduciary behaviour.


7. Further Issue of Shares (Pre-emption)

  • Existing shareholders get first right to subscribe for new shares.

  • Allocation is:

    • pro rata

    • within a defined offer period (~10 business days)

  • Excess applications allowed.

Purpose:

Protects against dilution and preserves ownership balance.


8. Transfer of Shares – General

  • Restricts transfers unless:

    • permitted under agreement, or

    • approved by board (with shareholder consent)

  • Requires transferees to sign a deed of adherence.

  • Board can block transfers to competitors.

Purpose:

Maintains tight control over cap table and ownership quality.


9. Transfer of Shares – Permitted Transfers

  • Allows transfers to:

    • family members

    • wholly owned entities

  • Requires re-transfer if eligibility ceases.

Purpose:

Provides limited flexibility for personal structuring, without losing control.


10. Transfer of Shares – Pre-emption (Sale Process)

  • Selling shareholder must:

    • issue transfer notice

    • offer shares internally first

  • Other shareholders have priority to buy.

  • Only unsold shares can go to third parties.

Purpose:

Creates an internal market for shares, keeping ownership within the group where possible.


11. Transfer of Shares – Valuation

  • Independent accountant determines “Fair Value”.

  • Assumptions include:

    • arm’s length sale

    • going concern basis

    • no control premium/discount

Purpose:

Provides a neutral pricing mechanism, reducing disputes on exit.


12. Compulsory Transfer – Leaver Provisions

  • Applies when a shareholder leaves the business.

  • Shares must be transferred.

  • Pricing:

    • Good Leaver → fair value (or nominal if higher)

    • Bad Leaver → lower of fair value or nominal

Purpose:

Aligns behaviour by rewarding good exits and penalising bad ones.


13. Compulsory Transfer – Material Breach

  • If a shareholder commits a material breach:

    • forced transfer triggered

    • treated as Bad Leaver

  • Disputes can be referred to senior legal counsel.

Purpose:

Provides enforcement leverage against misconduct or non-compliance.


14. Restrictions (Non-Compete & Non-Solicit)

  • Shareholders cannot:

    • compete with the business

    • solicit clients, staff, or suppliers

  • Applies during ownership and ~12 months post-exit.

  • Includes brand usage restrictions.

Purpose:

Protects commercial relationships and goodwill.


15. Confidentiality

  • All parties must:

    • keep business and agreement information confidential

    • only disclose where legally required or for business purposes

Purpose:

Safeguards sensitive commercial and operational information.


16. Notices

  • Sets out formal communication methods:

    • post, hand delivery, email

  • Defines when notices are deemed received.

Purpose:

Ensures legal certainty in communications and process triggers.


17. Costs & Expenses

  • Each party bears its own legal and transaction costs.

Purpose:

Avoids disputes over deal cost allocation.


18. General Legal Provisions

Includes:

  • cumulative remedies

  • entire agreement

  • variation (~90% consent required)

  • termination triggers

  • effect of ceasing to hold shares

  • no partnership clause

  • assignment restrictions

  • third party rights exclusion

  • conflict with articles

  • severance

  • counterparts

Purpose:

Provides standard legal infrastructure ensuring enforceability and flexibility.


19. Governing Law & Jurisdiction

  • Governed by English law

  • Disputes subject to England & Wales courts

Purpose:

Anchors the agreement in a clear legal framework and forum.


20. Schedules

  • Schedule 1: company details + shareholding breakdown

  • Schedule 2: reserved matters list

  • Schedule 3: deed of adherence template

Purpose:

Houses operational detail and templates that support the core agreement.


Overall Structural Insight

  • The agreement is built in layers:

    • governance (board + consent)

    • ownership control (transfers + pre-emption)

    • value protection (IP + restrictions)

    • risk enforcement (leaver + breach)

    • conflict resolution (deadlock + exit)

Result:

A fully integrated control framework governing how ownership, decision-making, and value interact over the life of the company.


What this actually costs

Light (£990 ex VAT)

What you’re getting:

  • A simple shareholders’ agreement or founders' agreement which is more interim in nature

  • Covers the basics:

    • Who owns what

    • Basic decision-making

    • Simple exit provisions

What it’s good for:

  • Early-stage businesses

  • Founders who trust each other and want something “just in case”

  • Low-risk setups (no investors, simple model)

What it doesn’t fully cover:

  • Legal advice on the various elements of ownership/governance

  • Complex deadlock scenarios

  • Detailed leaver penalties (good/bad leaver nuance)

  • Strong IP structuring

  • Heavily negotiated edge cases

Think: “We just need something sensible in place, not over-engineered.”


Mid (£1,237 – £1,980 ex VAT)

What you’re getting:

  • A more structured and commercially thought-through agreement

  • Includes:

    • Clearer governance (how decisions are made)

    • More robust exit rules

    • Better share transfer controls

    • Some leaver framework (good vs bad leaver logic)

What it’s good for:

  • Businesses needing legal advice on the various elements of ownership/governance and IP etc

  • Growing businesses

  • Founders starting to think about:

    • scaling

    • bringing in partners or investors

  • Situations where there’s some risk of misalignment

What it still may not fully cover:

  • Highly detailed deadlock mechanisms

  • Advanced IP protections across all scenarios

  • Complex negotiation dynamics

  • Heavily customised clauses

  • Not full advice on associated legal elements of operating a business

Think: “We’re getting more serious — we need structure, not just basics.”


Complete (£2,475 – £4,970+ ex VAT) — most aligned with your example

What you’re getting:

  • A fully bespoke, strategically structured agreement

  • Option for advice on all critical elements of operating a business legally

  • Designed around your specific risks, dynamics, and future plans

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MEET THE FOUNDER

Hey, I'm Ian!

I'm on a mission to ensure that the risk-takers and innovators of the world have the right legal support and contracts to keep them out of harm's way so that they can prosper.

I've seen too many people face the devastating consequences of business when things go wrong – it's damaging to individuals and society.

We're doing our bit to improve business success rates by offering high-quality accessible legal solutions globally, powered by tech and supported by leading legal professionals.

WHAT WE'RE ALL ABOUT:

Simple & scalable legal solutions for modern businesses

Impacting society by supporting risk-takers & innovators

Boosting social mobility & economic empowerment

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