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Page 1: Partnerships: A necessary evil? - MaRS Best Practices

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Page 2: Partnerships: A necessary evil? - MaRS Best Practices

Partnerships – A Necessary Evil?

Jeff Dennis May 8, 2012 Tracy Hooey

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Introduction

Jeff Dennis Entrepreneur in Residence Fasken Martineau 416 868 7544 [email protected] Tracy Hooey Partner Securities and Mergers & Acquisitions Fasken Martineau 416 868 3439 [email protected]

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Outline

•  Do you really want a partner? •  Is this the right partner? •  Roles, responsibilities and powers •  Communication • Get it in writing •  Legal form of relationship •  Contributions of each partner (financially and otherwise) •  Compensation •  Right to information •  Decision making •  Control who your partner is (today and in the future) •  Restrict what your partner does •  Exit options

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Do You Really Want a Partner

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Do You Really Want a Partner

• Partnership* is like a marriage – easy to get into; messy to get a divorce

• Make your partnership decision carefully • There are alternatives to partnership, including hiring

someone, rather than giving them equity in your business

* When used in this presentation, partnership is used broadly to mean any association between two or

more persons and may include corporations, general partnerships, limited partnerships or joint ventures.

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Is This the Right Partner

• More often than not, entrepreneurs spend more time interviewing employees than they spend time getting to know a prospective partner

• Get to know your prospective partner: • Do they share your values? • Do they share your goals and expectations – personal

and business? • Do they share your timeline? • What are you each contributing?

• Money • Property • Sweat equity

• Trust your gut!!

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Define Roles, Responsibilities and Powers • Distinguish between ownership and employment • Limits on obligations and risk • How are decisions made?

• Strategic • Major business decisions • New partners/investors

• Operational • Signing cheques • Signing contracts

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Communication

• What’s the vision for your business? • Strategic planning – quarterly and annual reviews • Performance reviews • Annual partner retreat • Disclosure rights

•  Financial information • Financial Statements • Annual business plan/budget

•  Corporate records •  Claims – liability and litigation

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Get it in Writing!

• Crystallize your intentions and expectations (including with respect to risk) in a binding agreement.

• Customize to your situation. • Assess your bargaining power. Will the provisions be

mutual? • You will learn a lot about your partner during the drafting and

negotiation process. • Address both your current and future needs and the

perspective of a future investor. • Hope for the best, prepare for the worst.

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Key Issues

• Legal form of relationship • Contributions of each partner (financially and otherwise) • Compensation • Right to information • Decision making • Control who your partner is (today and in the future) • Restrict what your partner does • Exit options

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Legal Form of Relationship

• The legal form of your relationship (eg. partnership, limited partnership, shareholder of corporation) may be determinative of certain issues, only some of which you can modify by contracts

• Statutory and/or common law rights may govern •  Limits on liability (ie. if you are a shareholder or a limited

partner) •  Duties to partner (ie. common law duties of good faith,

fiduciary duties of directors, each partner can bind others, joint and several liability)

•  Decision making (shareholder rights) •  Tax implications

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Contributions of each Partner

• Types of Contributions •  Tangible and intangible assets (like intellectual property) •  Financial equity (initial and ongoing capital requirements;

guarantees of obligations of partnership) •  Sweat equity (services)

• How are they valued? What is the consideration?

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Capital Requirements

• What are the partnership’s initial and anticipated future capital requirements and how will these be funded?

• Who will determine the timing and terms of any capital calls? • What are the repercussions of non-compliance with calls by

any partner? • How will this impact your relative ownership? • Provide for pre-emptive rights (the right to participate) in the

event of third party financings (to prevent dilution of interest)

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Compensation

• Consider how you will be ‘paid’ and who will determine • Will there be cash and non-cash (eg. options) compensation? • Consider tax implications of different forms of compensation • Balance the need for compensation with capital requirements

of organization

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Right to Information

• What information do you need about your business •  While you are a partner

• Financial statements • Annual business plan and budget (and variations from

them) • Tax Information • Minute books/corporate records •  Information regarding disputes/litigation/proceedings

•  After you leave the partnership

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Decision Making

• Who will make key strategic decisions? • Will there be a board of directors or other governing body and

what will be the composition of it and its powers? • Who will make operational decisions and who will select

those people?

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Significant Decisions

• Are there some decisions that require a prescribed level of approval of partners (such as unanimous, super majority, prescribed quorum, veto rights) •  Capital expenditures of certain dollar amount •  Termination or sale of partnership/underlying business •  Declaration of dividends/distributions •  Borrowings and guarantees •  Significant contracts and signing authority (bank accounts) •  Approval of Annual Business Plan/Budget •  Fundamental transactions •  Transfer of ownership interests or addition of new partner

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Control Who Your Partner Is

• Restrict the active transfer of partnership interests (whether securities or contractual rights) without your consent

• Protect against transfers of assets by statute (i.e. at the time of death, disability, insolvency or divorce of your partner)

• Consider indirect transfers (i.e. upon a change of control of your partner)

• Consider the ability to pledge interests • Consider the ability to add a new partner (of equal or lesser

priority)

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Restrict What Your Partner Does

• Non-competition • Non-solicit (customers, employees, clients, suppliers) • Confidentiality • Dispute resolution (will it be restricted to arbitration?)

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Exit

• A time may come when you or your partner no longer wants to be part of the business

• Unless your contract provides for it, you may not be able to buy out or sell to your partner

• Anticipate the worst

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Exit Options

• Right to transfer (with a right of first refusal) • Piggyback/Drag along rights • Put/Sell option • Shotgun

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Right of First Refusal

• Sell interest only after giving your other partner(s) the right to purchase or refuse to purchase

• Different options – is the right of first refusal triggered only if a partner receives a good faith offer from a third party to purchase a partner’s interest or can a partner simply offer its interest to other partners on terms established by the partner?

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Piggyback/Drag-Along Rights

• Piggyback Right •  If one partner offers to sell its interest to a third party, the

other partner can “piggyback” on the sale and sell its interest too

•  The purchaser of one partner’s interest must purchase all interests on the same terms and conditions

•  Improves the liquidity if you are a minority partner but can limit liquidity if you are the majority partner

• Drag-Along Right •  If one partner sells its interest, it can compel the other

partner(s) to sell to the same purchaser on the same terms and conditions

•  Will result in forced sale even if not interested

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Put/Call Rights

• Put Rights •  One partner requires the other partner(s) to buy its interest

• Call Rights •  One partner requires the other partner(s) to sell its interest

- usually upon certain events (ie. death, incapacity, insolvency, resignation, change of control)

• Valuation – need to have a mechanism to determine value

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Shotgun

• One partner notifies the other partner(s) the price at which it is willing to buy or sell its interest

• Other partner(s) must either elect to buy or sell at that price • Addresses deadlock situations • May not be optimal if partners have unequal financial

resources • Consider requiring a minimum price

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Summary

• Do you really want a partner? •  Is this the right partner? • Define the roles, responsibilities, contributions and powers of

each partner in advance and document them in a binding agreement

• Communication among partners is critical – Annual plan, quarterly reviews, annual retreat

• Control who your partner is (today and in the future) • Exit options

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Contact Information

Jeff Dennis Entrepreneur in Residence Fasken Martineau 416 868 7544 [email protected] Tracy Hooey Partner Securities and Mergers & Acquisitions Fasken Martineau 416 868 3439 [email protected]

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