Dear Business Owner:
Whether you're
paying someone to create products or write copy for your business... or
you're an independent contractor who gets paid to do such work, you need the right
legal forms.
Hi. I'm Mike Young...the attorney who helps
|
-
An
Internet marketer who is also an attorney.
-
Admitted
to practice law in Texas, Pennsylvania, and before the
U.S. Tax Court.
-
Received
a Masters in International and Comparative Law degree from
Georgetown University Law Center and a Juris Doctor degree
from S.M.U. School of Law.
-
Created
more than 11,300 legal documents relied upon by other
legal professionals and online businesses daily throughout
the United States.
|
businesses like yours. I've created a set of work-for-hire
legal forms designed to protect
your rights...whether you're outsourcing work or doing the work.
These are not old or obsolete forms.
They were custom-created in January 2007 to reflect current laws.
Here's
what this set includes...
|
1.
Outsourcing Agreement
Whether you're
paying a web designer, a coder, or someone to
write/transcribe an info product, a work-for-hire agreement
is a great way to protect your legal rights. This includes
making it clear that (a) you own all copyrights, trademarks,
and patents, (b) the person you're paying is an independent
contractor and not an employee, and (c) that you're not
liable for the contractor's income taxes, unemployment or
workers' compensation, benefits, etc. This legal form
is slanted to favor you as the paying customer.
2.
Contractor's Agreement
If
you're getting paid to do work for someone else, such as web
design, copywriting, or computer programming, this
work-for-hire agreement is designed to get you paid and
avoid legal headaches. Plus you can create swipe files
from your work to use with future customers without worrying
about violating your current customer's intellectual
property rights. And if you subcontract part of the work,
you can use the other work-for-hire agreement to protect
your interests too.
And there's
more...
Both
legal forms
have provisions designed to keep disputes confidential, out
of court, and handled near your
office. In other words, it limits the rights of those who
threaten to sue you in court half way across the country,
hoping that you'll settle rather than spend the time and
money to defend yourself.
|
These legal forms
will be provided to you in MSWord (.doc), Rich Text Format
(.rtf), and Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) formats so that you can easily customize them by simply filling in the blanks.
Okay – How Much?
Based on the number of hours involved, when
qualified business lawyers create legal documents like these, they typically charge clients between
$400 to $500 for each of them. That's actually a bargain when you consider how much money clients save
by avoiding just one lawsuit.
However, you can obtain
a nonexclusive license to use both legal forms
for a lot less because I won't be spending hours with you that I do with my
clients.
So here's the deal...
You can
get the full protection of both work-for-hire agreements for only $49. That's less than what a good business lawyer
will charge you for 15 minutes of his time.
Just
click on the button below.
Please
note that $49 is an introductory price. If you wait, you may pay
more.
Regards,

Michael
E. Young, J.D., LL.M.
Attorney & Counselor at Law
Dallas, Texas
P.S.
Get the forms right now and save yourself time, money, and headaches
later.