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  • Case Upon - Use Noncompete Agreements To Protect Your Business

    Invention Submissions
    You have an idea for a new invention and you’ve already developed it. However, you know you don’t have the resources to produce your invention and turn a profit. Well, companies ask for invention submissions on a fairly regular basis, so this could present some wonderful opportunities for you.Your first step before making an invention submission is to obtain a patent. Contact a patent lawyer and the United States Patent and Trademark office. The patent lawyer will help you through the submission process and help insure that you are legally protected against any potential problems. There is a fee, but since this can change, it is best to contact the USPTO yourself. This step protects your invention and idea fr
    ry from business to business, the following is a good general list. The term "employees" represents executive level, management, supervisory, and non-management personnel relative to that example:

    * Employees involved in research or product development.

    * Employees involved in the design, fabrication, engineering, and manufacturing process.

    * Employees who service products made and sold by your company.

    * Sales and service employees who have regular contact with customers or sensitive customer information.

    * Employees with access to sensitive business information or trade secret

    Advertising Agency Software: What You Need to Know
    There are many different types of software that an advertising agency needs to conduct business efficiently. Here are some examples of tasks that can be supported by software that is currently available to agencies:Create estimates and quotes, invoices and schedules for client approvalPrepare drafts of a new brochure, print ad, or annual report for reviewManage client feedback on direct mail materialsTrack key project milestone datesPrepare and review media plansPrepare a storyboard presentation for a clientPrepare market researchSchedule project tasksReview rough
    Q: One of my former employees has launched an online business very similar to mine and is contacting my clients and trying to steal their business from me. Do I have any legal recourse against him? -- Brad J.

    A: I hate to break this to you, Brad, but unless this former employee signed a noncompete agreement while on your payroll, there is probably very little you can do to stop him from wooing your customers. You should discuss the situation with your attorney, but unless this person is also breaking the law in some other way (violating your copyrights or trademarks or using stolen trade secrets, for example.) Your attorney will probably concur with me.

    Renegade former employees riding the free enterprise wave is one reason noncompete agreements are gaining in popularity among employers who hope to use them to help protect their traditional and online businesses from competitive threats launched by former employees. Many employers are now demanding that key employees sign noncompetes as a stipulation of employment. While signing noncompetes usually doesn't sit well with employees who view them as potential roadblocks to their upwardly mobile career path, many businesses will not hire a key employee without his or her signature on the dotted line.

    A noncompete agreement is a formal contract between you and your employees in which they promise not to use information or contacts pertinent to your business in a competing situation. In other words, they agree not to take everything they learn working for you and put it to use for someone else. This could mean going to work for a competitor or starting a competing business of their own.

    While not popular with employees, noncompete agreements are a good way for employers to keep key employees on the payroll and protect the company's proprietary information. That said, do not go overboard with noncompetes: not every employee should be required to sign one. If an employee does not have access to sensitive information, customer or accounting data, or is integral to the overall success of your business, there is no need to have them sign a noncompete. The janitor, for example, poses very little threat to your business if he gets a job with a competitor. Your sales manager, on the other hand, can devastate your business by hooking his wagon to a competing horse.

    Which employees should sign noncompete agreements? While the prerequisites vary from business to business, the following is a good general list. The term "employees" represents executive level, management, supervisory, and non-management personnel relative to that example:

    * Employees involved in research or product development.

    * Employees involved in the design, fabrication, engineering, and manufacturing process.

    * Employees who service products made and sold by your company.

    * Sales and service employees who have regular contact with customers or sensitive customer information.

    * Employees with access to sensitive business information or trade secret

    Seven Reasons Why Women Should Lead the New World of Business©
    Congratulations to Fortune Magazine, July 24, 2006, for having the “guts” to dethrone Jack Welch’s autocratic management leadership practices in Betsy Morris’s article……….Titled, Sorry, Jack………. Welch’s Rules for Winning Don’t Work Any MoreOnce upon a time, there was a route to success that corporate America agreed on. But in today’s fast-changing landscape, that old formula is getting tired. And, a search is on for......the New Rules.Management by Intimidation – The Old Rules – The 80’s & 90’s – Early 2000’sFor over two decades, I worked under the “Old Rules” of the Welsh Management Style directly witnessing CEO’s, CFO’s, COO’s, CIO’s and many senior leader men role-model Directive
    for example.) Your attorney will probably concur with me.

    Renegade former employees riding the free enterprise wave is one reason noncompete agreements are gaining in popularity among employers who hope to use them to help protect their traditional and online businesses from competitive threats launched by former employees. Many employers are now demanding that key employees sign noncompetes as a stipulation of employment. While signing noncompetes usually doesn't sit well with employees who view them as potential roadblocks to their upwardly mobile career path, many businesses will not hire a key employee without his or her signature on the dotted line.

    A noncompete agreement is a formal contract between you and your employees in which they promise not to use information or contacts pertinent to your business in a competing situation. In other words, they agree not to take everything they learn working for you and put it to use for someone else. This could mean going to work for a competitor or starting a competing business of their own.

    While not popular with employees, noncompete agreements are a good way for employers to keep key employees on the payroll and protect the company's proprietary information. That said, do not go overboard with noncompetes: not every employee should be required to sign one. If an employee does not have access to sensitive information, customer or accounting data, or is integral to the overall success of your business, there is no need to have them sign a noncompete. The janitor, for example, poses very little threat to your business if he gets a job with a competitor. Your sales manager, on the other hand, can devastate your business by hooking his wagon to a competing horse.

    Which employees should sign noncompete agreements? While the prerequisites vary from business to business, the following is a good general list. The term "employees" represents executive level, management, supervisory, and non-management personnel relative to that example:

    * Employees involved in research or product development.

    * Employees involved in the design, fabrication, engineering, and manufacturing process.

    * Employees who service products made and sold by your company.

    * Sales and service employees who have regular contact with customers or sensitive customer information.

    * Employees with access to sensitive business information or trade secret

    Career Suicide: 5 Steps to Failure
    Your career can affect every area of happiness in your life, from your recreational options to your family-life, from your financial stability to your personal fulfillment. Yet so many of us fall into common traps that sabotage our careers and endanger our futures. Don’t let yourself fall prey to any of the self-destructive choices below:1. Ignoring your talents2. Living beyond your means3. Torching the trellises4. Not planning ahead5a. Choosing a profession you don't believe in5b. Choosing a profession you hate1. Ignoring your talents. So what if everyone told you being an engineer would make you more money than drawin
    loyee without his or her signature on the dotted line.

    A noncompete agreement is a formal contract between you and your employees in which they promise not to use information or contacts pertinent to your business in a competing situation. In other words, they agree not to take everything they learn working for you and put it to use for someone else. This could mean going to work for a competitor or starting a competing business of their own.

    While not popular with employees, noncompete agreements are a good way for employers to keep key employees on the payroll and protect the company's proprietary information. That said, do not go overboard with noncompetes: not every employee should be required to sign one. If an employee does not have access to sensitive information, customer or accounting data, or is integral to the overall success of your business, there is no need to have them sign a noncompete. The janitor, for example, poses very little threat to your business if he gets a job with a competitor. Your sales manager, on the other hand, can devastate your business by hooking his wagon to a competing horse.

    Which employees should sign noncompete agreements? While the prerequisites vary from business to business, the following is a good general list. The term "employees" represents executive level, management, supervisory, and non-management personnel relative to that example:

    * Employees involved in research or product development.

    * Employees involved in the design, fabrication, engineering, and manufacturing process.

    * Employees who service products made and sold by your company.

    * Sales and service employees who have regular contact with customers or sensitive customer information.

    * Employees with access to sensitive business information or trade secret

    Bootstrapping Your Way to Success
    There is no more accurate American descriptive phrase of the rags to riches success then: “He pulled himself up by his bootstraps”. The pioneers, backwoodsmen, cowboys, whalers and other prototypical American hero classes all possessed an air of courage, self-reliance, and belief that they could beat the odds. They are wonderful samples of entrepreneurs at the most elemental level.My favorite method of starting a business, launching a product or service is the old fashioned, do it myself, Bootstrapping. The ability to bootstrap a startup eliminates so many of the hurdles normally confronting the entrepreneur. Raising money, building inventory, dependence on support from others and assembling fixed overheads i
    tary information. That said, do not go overboard with noncompetes: not every employee should be required to sign one. If an employee does not have access to sensitive information, customer or accounting data, or is integral to the overall success of your business, there is no need to have them sign a noncompete. The janitor, for example, poses very little threat to your business if he gets a job with a competitor. Your sales manager, on the other hand, can devastate your business by hooking his wagon to a competing horse.

    Which employees should sign noncompete agreements? While the prerequisites vary from business to business, the following is a good general list. The term "employees" represents executive level, management, supervisory, and non-management personnel relative to that example:

    * Employees involved in research or product development.

    * Employees involved in the design, fabrication, engineering, and manufacturing process.

    * Employees who service products made and sold by your company.

    * Sales and service employees who have regular contact with customers or sensitive customer information.

    * Employees with access to sensitive business information or trade secret

    What is Private Franchising? It is Nothing Someone Made It Up
    The Federal Trade Commission has an obligation to the general public, their stated consumer education mission and to the over regulated franchising industry and the small business operators running Biz Ops to separate the two business models by way of legal definition. Any failure to completely separate them will trigger additional problems down the road and cause the current on-going process of rule review to continue, without any formalization for decades.This of course is good for attorneys who make money on these ambiguities for lawsuits and great for Federal Trade Commission tenure and job security. A few also realize it could allow for additional travel budgets of governmental employees during these rul
    ry from business to business, the following is a good general list. The term "employees" represents executive level, management, supervisory, and non-management personnel relative to that example:

    * Employees involved in research or product development.

    * Employees involved in the design, fabrication, engineering, and manufacturing process.

    * Employees who service products made and sold by your company.

    * Sales and service employees who have regular contact with customers or sensitive customer information.

    * Employees with access to sensitive business information or trade secrets.

    * Most importantly, employees who have sufficient information about your business that would allow them to start a competing business.

    Most business experts agree that noncompete agreements are generally a good way to protect your business. The downside is that noncompete agreements are often difficult to enforce and in some states, may not be enforceable at all. Many state courts have ruled that noncompete agreements are too restrictive on an employee's right to earn a living.

    In California, for instance, noncompetes are generally only enforceable in connection with the sale of a business and not for employees. In Alabama where I live, noncompetes are generally enforceable in only two contexts: the sale of a business and in connection with employment - but even then the enforcement requires that there be a valid interest worthy of protection. Some states require that the noncompete be signed at the beginning of the employment relationship and will only consider the enforcement of a noncompete signed after the initial employment date if the signing of the noncompete was accompanied by a promotion, raise in pay, or other event that elevated the employee to a more important role within the company.

    To be enforceable, noncompete agreements must be reasonable on three accounts: Time, geography and scope. Regarding time, you can't restrict someone from competing with you forever, so one to three years is the accepted time period for most noncompetes. As to geography, you can enforce restriction in the general area where you conduct business, but you can not enforce the restriction beyond those boundaries. And for scope, the agreement can restrict certain actions on the part of the employee, but can't be so generally restrictive that the employee won't be able to earn a living working in the same industry in a noncompetitive position.

    One interesting thing to note: noncompete agreements are not enforceable against certain "professionals," like doctors, CPAs, and lawyers (who do you think writes all those noncompetes).

    At this point, Brad, the best thing you can do is contact your attorney to see if you have other grounds for suit, then contact your customers and let them know what's going on. Explain the situation regarding the former employee, but do so calmly and resist the urge to tell them what you really think of this guy. Showing your anger to the customer is not going to

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