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Benefits of non-compete, non-disclosure, and non-solicitation agreements

Law Office of David Steinfeld - expert business lawyer
Businesses need to protect themselves. One of the easiest methods is through documents by which another party agrees not to improperly use or take information or personnel from the business to compete against it. These documents are non-compete or non-competition agreements, non-solicitation agreements, and non-disclosure agreements and they can provide great benefits to a business in Florida when prepared properly.


While these documents may not stop someone from stealing information or persuading key employees to leave, they do place the business in a position to more easily enforce its rights and protect itself. However because they limits free trade there are restrictions that apply to some of those documents therefore they must be prepared by competent counsel to avoid making the situation worse.

What is a non-compete, non-disclosure, and non-solicitation agreement

Non-competes, non-disclosures or NDAs, and non-solicitation agreements like most contracts are reactive. They will not literally prevent someone from competing or stealing trade secrets but they create an efficient method for a business to enforce its rights.

Florida non-competes

Non-competes in Florida are regulated by a particular state and are terms restraints of trade. As such they are required by law to be reasonable with regard to the geographic and temporal restrictions they set. Some of these limits are defined in the statute while others are dependent on the manner in which the business operates. These agreements can stand alone or be a part of another agreement, like an employment agreement. When taken alone they are non-compete agreements. When embedded in another contract, they are non-competition clauses.

Florida non-disclosures or NDAs

Non-disclosure agreements or NDAs identify and protect propriety information and trade secrets before they are disclosed. They can provide for the length of time during which the trade secrets are treated as confidential and define the penalties for violations. They too can stand alone or be part of another contract like an independent contractor agreement.

Florida non-solicitation agreements

Non-solicitation agreements limit or deny a party from taking employees, contractors, and/or customers of the business. These too can be limited in time and often define what is and what is not allowed.

While these agreements can stand alone or be combined with one another or other agreements, only the non-compete is required to have clearly defined consideration to support the agreement. This is so because of its unique statutory controls. If the independent consideration is absent it may be deemed unenforceable.

Which if these is right for a business, when, and what terms to include are the subjects of discussions with your corporate counsel. That person should provide the options and guidance so that the final agreement has the optimum chance of being enforced later should the need arise.

It is not recommended to do this yourself

Business owners that elect to create their own contracts or download these documents from an unknown source to avoid the expense of paying for expert business law advice, such as that from Florida Bar Board Certified business litigation lawyer David Steinfeld, usually create a bigger and more expensive problem for the business later.

A business that relies on its self-created or downloaded documents can believe for years that it is protected by such defective documents only to find out when it tries to enforce them that they do not work leaving the business unprotected. Too often business owners who have been penny wise and pound foolish learn that they cannot sue a former employee or other person who worked for the business on their agreement after that person left with trade secrets, customers, or took other critical employees with them because the self-created or downloaded document is not enforceable.

When a business spends significant time and money to develop proprietary and confidential business information the loss of that information to a competitor for example can be financially and emotionally devastating. That is not the best time to learn that the self-created or downloaded documents that saved a bit of money for the business at the time have now left without recourse when the business itself unwittingly empowered its own competition that will damage or destroy the business.

Be smart, be proactive

After spending years and significant sums to grow a business, one of the worst imaginable issues that the owner or owners can face is learning that they are helpless to fight off an attack from a former employee or new competitor who has absconded with what the business owner thought was protected proprietary business information.

Thus, sophisticated business owners invest the time and money to consult with Florida law business experts like David Steinfeld to understand the options available to them and to be able to make informed decisions on those points, which avoids more costly future disputes ever time.

Written by expert business lawyer David Steinfeld

business lawyer David Steinfeld
David Steinfeld is one of the few Board Certified business law experts in Florida. He has been licensed for over 25 years. He is AV-Preeminent rated, ranked as one of the Best Lawyers in America by U.S. News and World Report, and consistently named a Florida Super Lawyer and one of Florida’s Legal Elite. Dave has also received Martindale’s prestigious Judicial Edition Award for high reviews by Judges, its Platinum Client Champion Award and has a 10.0-Superb rating on AVVO as well as a 10.0 rating on Justia, lawyer reviews websites.

Check out business lawyer David Steinfeld online for helpful videos and articles on Florida business law, real estate disputes, and electronic discovery solutions for your business. T
his article is provided for informational purposes only.

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