Build your own high-value legal consultancy, without starting from zero
A faster and more structured way to build your own niche legal business
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
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
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
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
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.
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
Yes.
If you originate work:
– you can participate commercially
– even if another person delivers it
This is a key difference from traditional models.
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
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
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
(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
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
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.
Ready to build your very own legal consultancy of the future?
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
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
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
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.
Yes.
If you originate work:
– you can participate commercially
– even if another person delivers it
This is a key difference from traditional models.
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.
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
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
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
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
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.
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.







This case study analyses an interim founders' agreement for a global tech platform start-up, focusing on how equity, control, incentives, and downside protection are structured at an early stage.
The agreement is designed to balance:
asymmetric founder contribution at inception
future commitment uncertainty
protection against early departure
long-term IP consolidation within the company
It combines vesting, dynamic equity adjustment, and strong leaver mechanics to manage risk while preserving upside alignment.
Before this agreement, the structure would likely create material founder misalignment and downside exposure, particularly given the unequal contribution levels and initial 90:10 ownership. Care was needed to manage allocation of equity to a part-time or uncertain contributor, with no mechanism to adjust ownership if commitment never materialises. This creates a classic early-stage failure mode where one founder carries execution while the other retains disproportionate upside, leading to resentment, stalled decision-making, and difficulty raising capital due to an “unclean” cap table. There would also be no protection against early departure, meaning a founder could leave with meaningful equity despite limited contribution, creating long-term dead equity and governance friction.
Additionally, without formalised vesting, IP assignment, and leaver provisions, the business would face serious structural and investor risks. Intellectual property might remain fragmented or personally owned, undermining acquisition or fundraising readiness. There would be no clear mechanism to reclaim equity or enforce accountability, exposing the company to free-rider problems and potential disputes. Governance would also be weak, with no defined control rights, casting vote, or reserved matters framework—making deadlock highly likely. Overall, the pre-agreement state would be high-risk, informal, and misaligned with venture-scale expectations.
Post-agreement, the structure introduces tight alignment between ownership, contribution, and control, significantly reducing early-stage founder risk. Equity is no longer static—it becomes conditional, time-based, and performance-linked, particularly through vesting and the full-time trigger. This ensures that the minority founder’s ownership scales only if commitment increases, while the majority founder is protected from premature dilution. The inclusion of early exit economics (75/25 override) further reinforces this logic by aligning payout with actual contribution during the most fragile phase of the company. As a result, the cap table remains clean, defensible, and investor-ready.
The agreement also creates a robust institutional foundation for scaling, consolidating all IP within the company and introducing clear governance, control, and dispute mechanisms. Strong leaver provisions eliminate dead equity risk and enforce accountability, while operational and reporting structures ensure ongoing engagement. Control is clearly centralised (via majority ownership and casting vote), avoiding early deadlock while still preserving minority participation. Overall, the post-agreement structure transforms the business into a controlled, scalable, and investment-grade entity, with clear incentives, protections, and long-term value capture mechanisms in place.
The agreement is designed to:
formalise an imbalanced starting contribution (one original founder, one supporting founder)
create a pathway for future equity rebalancing based on commitment
protect the business from early-stage founder drop-off risk
ensure all value (especially IP) accrues to the company
Interpretation:
This structure treats one founder as the core operator, and the other as a conditional long-term partner whose ownership scales with commitment.
Founder A: ~90%
Founder B: ~10%
Implication:
Reflects pre-existing work, risk, and control
Establishes clear decision-making hierarchy from day one
50% vests immediately
50% vests monthly over 4 years
Implication:
Rewards past work
Enforces long-term retention and contribution
Standard startup vesting, but with high upfront recognition
If Founder B goes full-time:
Within ~6 months → increases to ~33%
Within ~12 months → increases to ~25%
Implication:
Equity is earned through commitment, not promised upfront
Creates a time-based incentive to join early
Protects majority founder from premature dilution
If company sells within ~12 months:
~75% proceeds to Founder A
~25% to Founder B
All shares accelerate to full vesting
Implication:
Overrides cap table to reflect true contribution at early stage
Prevents windfall gains from short-term passive involvement
Founder A: Managing Director (full operational control)
Founder B: Advisor (initially part-time)
Monthly reporting and updates
Regular strategy meetings (bi-monthly + quarterly deep dives)
Shared responsibility for growth and operations
Accounting outsourced early
Compliance, insurance, and legal handled proactively
Interpretation:
Founder A = execution engine
Founder B = strategic support with optional escalation to operator
All business-related IP assigned to the company
Applies to:
pre-incorporation work
ongoing developments
Founder personal brand/IP excluded but:
licensed to company (revocable, ~180 days notice)
Key commercial point:
The company owns all scalable value (IP, product, systems)
Implication:
Enables:
future fundraising
clean acquisitions
cross-market expansion (e.g. UAE subsidiary)
Only vested shares carry voting rights
Unvested shares are at risk on exit
~6 months post-exit restriction on clients
~12 months restriction on team/suppliers
Founders can pursue other ventures
Must avoid conflicts with company
Commercial purpose:
Protects:
early customer base
team stability
operational continuity
Voting aligned with shareholding
Founder A has casting vote during early phase
Both founders can be directors
Founder A acts as chairman
Key decisions require ~75% shareholder approval, including:
major transactions (~£20k+)
fundraising / dilution
structural changes
Interpretation:
Founder A retains effective control
Minority founder has limited blocking power
Three categories:
Good Leaver → fair value
Bad Leaver → discounted (~10–20%)
Horrible Leaver → nominal value
Always forfeited on exit
Transferred at nominal value
IP assignment warranties
confidentiality obligations
misconduct and reputation clauses
Implication:
Strong deterrent against:
early departure
underperformance
misconduct
Voluntary departure
breach / misconduct
incapacity
mutual agreement
Shares first offered to remaining founder
Company can buy if founder declines
Payment can be staged (~180 days)
Structured escalation:
internal discussion
independent third party
mediation (CEDR)
courts (UK)
Commercial implication:
Ensures orderly founder exit without destabilising the company
The deal combines:
heavily asymmetric initial ownership
performance-based equity scaling
strict vesting and clawback protections
Founder B’s upside is:
earned through commitment
time-sensitive (early join incentive)
Founder A retains:
control
downside protection
economic priority in early exit
IP structure ensures:
all long-term value sits at company level
Result:
This is a founder-first control structure with conditional partnership upside, turning the second founder into a probationary co-founder whose equity scales with execution and commitment.
Pre-revenue or testing phase
You want protection but not over-invest yet
Founders’/shareholders’ agreement (light structure)
Basic vesting clause
Simple IP assignment
Light leaver provisions
Around £990 (ex VAT)
👉 This would simplify:
Dynamic equity uplift (may be basic or manual)
Early exit economics (likely less customised)
You’re serious about building this
Some complexity (like your conditional equity + vesting)
Want to avoid redoing everything in 6–12 months
Proper vesting schedule (time-based + structure)
Conditional equity mechanics (your 10% → 25–33%)
Defined roles (operator vs advisor)
Structured leaver framework
IP assignment + licensing (important in your case)
£1,237 – £1,980 (ex VAT)
👉 This is often the sweet spot for setups like yours if:
risk is moderate
founders are aligned
You want this to hold up under pressure
Asymmetric founders (like your 90/10 split)
Complex incentives + downside protection
Dynamic equity adjustment (time + commitment-based)
Advanced vesting + acceleration logic
Custom early exit waterfall (75/25 override)
Multi-tier leaver framework (good / bad / horrible)
Detailed governance + control (casting vote, thresholds)
IP structure (assignment + licensing of personal brand)
Transfer + buyback mechanics (staged payments, etc.)
£2,475 – £4,970+ (ex VAT)
👉 Based on your case study, this is the closest match
(because of the dynamic equity + layered protections)
NDA (protect early discussions) → £99 – £195
Contractor/subcontractor agreements → £99 – £495
Preliminary compliance or structuring input → £297 – £495
If this is experimental → go Light
If this is serious but evolving → go Mid
If this is high-stakes or long-term → go Complete ✅
This is indicative pricing only (not legal advice)
Final scope depends on:
how detailed the equity mechanics are
how much negotiation/customisation is needed
Best move is to:
Copy your preferred option
Get it confirmed properly
👉 Book a free 15–30 min call: https://new-legal.com/


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

*T&Cs apply. N3WWW LTD (trading as 'New' & 'New Legal'), part of the New Legal Group, is a limited company registered in England & Wales (no. 13889459), registered office Suite 169, 23 King Street, Cambridge, CB1 1AH. New is a business infrastructure platform. New Legal is a legal consultancy, not a law firm, and is not authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. We do not provide regulated accountancy or audit services ourselves. Accountancy, bookkeeping and tax services are delivered by our third-party partners. New is not an insurance broker or FCA-regulated insurance intermediary. English law only. Sponsorship, promotions and credits apply to selected products, services and tiers only – T&Cs and eligibility apply. Subject to availability. Services are provided subject to our Terms of Service & Privacy Policy available here: https://new-legal.com/legal