A practical contract management guide for startups. Covers SAFE agreements, equity documents, vendor contracts, employment agreements, and scaling pro
Key Takeaways: Early-Stage Contract Priorities · Founder Agreement Essentials · Investor Document Management · Customer Contract Scaling · Building Contract Processes That Scale
TL;DR: Startups generate a surprising volume of contracts from day one: founder agreements, advisor agreements, employee offers, investor documents, customer contracts, vendor agreements, and IP assignments. Managing these properly from the start prevents costly problems during fundraising due diligence, acquisition negotiations, and litigation. This guide covers the essential contracts for each startup stage, the management practices that prevent chaos, and the scalable systems that grow with the company.
Startups are document machines. Before the first customer signs up, a typical startup has generated dozens of legal documents: articles of incorporation, founder agreements, equity grants, IP assignment agreements, advisor agreements, employment offer letters, NDA, and potentially investor documents. Each subsequent stage generates more: customer contracts, vendor agreements, partnership deals, lease agreements, and additional fundraising documents.
The startups that manage these documents well gain a concrete advantage. When a VC firm's attorneys conduct due diligence, they request every significant agreement the company has executed. The startups that produce a clean, organized virtual data room in 48 hours move to term sheets faster than those that spend two weeks hunting through email, Dropbox, and desk drawers for signed copies.
This guide maps the essential contracts for each growth stage and provides practical systems for managing them, starting lean and scaling as the company grows.
Certificate/Articles of Incorporation or Organization. The foundational document establishing the legal entity. For Delaware C-corps (the standard structure for venture-backed startups), this is filed with the Delaware Secretary of State. Keep the stamped original and certified copies accessible.
Founder Agreement. The single most important startup document. Defines each founder's equity ownership, vesting schedule, roles and responsibilities, IP assignment to the company, non-compete and non-solicitation commitments, and what happens when a founder leaves. Most startup disputes trace back to inadequate or missing founder agreements. Get this right with attorney guidance.
IP Assignment Agreement. Every founder and early contributor must assign to the company any intellectual property they developed that relates to the company's business. Without these assignments, the company may not own its core technology. This is the first thing investors' attorneys check during due diligence.
Equity Incentive Plan. If you plan to grant stock options to employees or advisors (and you should), establish a formal equity incentive plan. This includes the plan document itself, the board resolution adopting it, and the individual grant agreements and exercise agreements.
Advisor Agreements. Advisors who receive equity compensation need signed agreements specifying their advisory role, time commitment, equity grant details, confidentiality obligations, and IP assignment provisions.
Customer Agreements. As you sign customers, standardize your contract approach early. Create template agreements for your primary business models: SaaS subscription agreements, professional services agreements, licensing agreements, or terms of service for product companies. A strong template drafted once prevents contract-by-contract negotiation for standard deals.
Employment Documentation. As you hire beyond the founders, maintain consistent employment documentation: offer letters with compensation details, at-will employment statements (where applicable), confidentiality and IP assignment agreements (every employee must sign these), employee handbook acknowledgments, and benefits enrollment forms.
Vendor and SaaS Agreements. Track every vendor relationship with a signed agreement. Cloud hosting, development tools, marketing platforms, office services. These agreements contain commitments, auto-renewal terms, and data handling obligations that matter during due diligence and acquisition.
Fundraising Documents. Each fundraising round generates: term sheets, stock purchase agreements, investor rights agreements, voting agreements, certificates of incorporation amendments, and legal opinion letters. These documents must be perfectly organized because every subsequent round's attorneys will review all prior round documents.
At the earliest stage, a structured Google Drive folder or Dropbox organization is sufficient. As the company grows, upgrade to purpose-built tools:
Startup Stage (0-20 contracts):
Growth Stage (20-200 contracts):
Scale Stage (200+ contracts):
ZiaSign fits into every stage of this progression. From day one, founders use ZiaSign to sign formation documents, advisor agreements, and early customer contracts electronically. As the company scales, ZiaSign's API enables integration with CRM and CLM systems for automated document generation and signing. The comprehensive audit trails and secure storage provide the evidence quality that due diligence requires.
Every startup should be due diligence-ready at all times, not scrambling when an investor or acquirer requests documents. This means maintaining a virtual data room structure even before it is needed:
Organization and corporate documents. Formation documents, bylaws, board minutes, stockholder consents, and entity registrations.
Equity and capitalization. Cap table, equity plan documents, option grants, exercise records, and SAFEs or convertible notes.
Intellectual property. IP assignments from all founders, employees, and contractors. Patent applications and trademark registrations. Open-source usage documentation.
Material contracts. All customer agreements above a materiality threshold. All vendor agreements. All partnership and distribution agreements. Revenue-significant contracts should be immediately accessible.
Employment. Offer letters, employment agreements, contractor agreements, and separation agreements for all current and former team members.
Financial. Tax returns, audit reports (if applicable), bank statements, and material financial commitments.
The organizations that maintain this structure continuously close transactions faster, negotiate from stronger positions, and avoid the embarrassing discovery of missing or unsigned documents that can delay or derail important deals.
If you want a deeper operational playbook, continue with these guides:
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