Previous Sessions (Fall 2025)
Introduction to Startup Law
September 16, 5:00-6:15 P.M.
In this session, our startup law team will present a lightning round of the key legal needs and issues for a startup: founders agreements, equity splits, company formation, handling IP, raising capital, building a team, etc. Then, you will get to ask YOUR most pressing legal questions. This session will be the basis of future Start Smarts which will go into each of the issues more in depth.
Starting a Business with an F-1 Student Visa
October 7, 5:00-6:15 P.M.
Students with a Visa can legally start businesses as well as work on a startup team. Come learn the details of how to do this without violating your student status and immigration options after graduating.
How to Form Your Startup Company | 2 Part Workshop
October 28 & November 18, 5:00-6:15 P.M.
Please note: How to Form Your Startup Company will take place over 2 sessions. In order to attend Part 2: The Workshop, attendees must first attend Part 1: The Basics. Attendees for Part 1 will receive information on how to log into Part 2 upon completion of session.
During Part 1 (October 28), you will learn the basic legal issues involved with new company formation, including choice of entity (LLC, C-Corp, social enterprise options such as non-profit 501c, Benefit Corporation, B Corps certification, and other company structure alternatives), basics of founders’ agreements, splitting equity, and employee vesting. Participants will receive a legal road map and checklist to begin working on prior to “How to Form Your Startup Company, Part 2: Workshop”.
In Part 2 (November 18), your team will be matched with one or more law students to design a “legal roadmap” that will recommend the best entity option for your startup and the basics of a Founders Agreement. You will also receive guidance on other legal issues on your ‘checklist’ – all under the supervision of experienced startup lawyers!
How to Handle Your (and others’) Intellectual Property
December 2, 5:00-6:15 P.M.
Intellectual Property is an asset to be protected. This session will cover how to deal with IP issues including:
- Different ways to protect your company’s IP (copyrights, trade secrets, patents, trademarks, etc.)
- Do you really need a patent?
- Difference between a provisional patent and a formal patent filing
- Developing a patent strategy
- How to handle IP created by class projects when one or more of the student team members want to pursue commercialization
- Tips on searching the US Patent Office Database (for prior ‘art’ e.g. existing patents)
- What to expect after filing a patent (time and expenses)