Startup equity lawyer

What this page covers
Startup equity lawyer
Femida.us helps founders review startup equity issues by examining company records, approvals, contracts, emails, and other documents tied to ownership and control.
This page covers US startup equity questions involving founder agreements, equity documents, SAFE notes, financing paperwork, and investor-facing corporate records.
In brief
- Review founder ownership records, equity issuances, approvals, and related company documents when questions arise about control, changes, or past decisions.
- Organize corporate records, consents, equity files, and IP assignment materials before financing discussions, investor diligence, or internal cleanup work.
- Address startup equity issues together with related paperwork such as option grants, founder documents, SAFE notes, contracts, financial records, and emails.
What to do
Startup equity work often starts with the documents already in the company’s files. These can include formation records, board or stockholder consents, equity issuances, contracts, financial records, emails, and other materials that help explain ownership, approvals, and company history.
When a startup is preparing for investor review, missing or incomplete records can create uncertainty. A careful review may focus on corporate housekeeping, equity documentation, option grants, cap table records, and related paperwork that can affect how the company is presented during diligence.
For founders handling US startup matters, equity questions often overlap with entity structure, founder arrangements, IP ownership records, and financing documents. Keeping these materials organized can help clarify what exists, what is missing, and what may need further legal attention.
What to keep in mind
This page is most relevant for founders who need help understanding startup equity paperwork, gathering company records, or preparing documents for investor review. The focus is practical and document-based, centered on what the company can actually produce and explain.
The right next step depends on the current state of the records. Corporate approvals, equity issuances, option grants, contracts, emails, financial materials, and IP assignments may all matter when ownership, control, or cap table questions need careful review.
Some startup equity matters involve more than one set of documents. Founder paperwork, contractor files, IP ownership records, financing materials, and US expansion issues can all affect how the overall company record should be reviewed and organized.
