Software development agreement lawyer

What this page covers
Software development agreement lawyer
Femida.us helps software and technology businesses with contracts involving software development, licensing, technology transactions, and intellectual property.
This page is for companies that need legal support with a software development agreement, especially when the deal also affects ownership, licensing rights, deliverables, or other IP issues.
In brief
- A software development agreement lawyer can help structure terms around scope, ownership, licensing, acceptance, and delivery in software projects.
- This is especially relevant for work-for-hire arrangements and other development contracts where rights to the code, product, or related IP need to be clearly addressed.
- Femida.us focuses on software, SaaS, IT, and technology matters, which makes this page relevant for software development agreement questions.
What to do
Femida.us works with software and technology companies on contracts, IP, licensing, and technology transactions. That background is relevant when a software development agreement needs to fit both the project terms and the larger business relationship.
Legal support may be useful when a development agreement covers custom builds, outsourced development, contractor relationships, licensing, IP assignment, confidentiality, or product commercialization. The strongest fit here is for software-driven businesses with transaction or ownership issues tied to the contract.
The firm also supports company formation, investment, M&A, and business disputes for technology companies. That can matter when a software development agreement is connected to a startup launch, platform growth, fundraising, or a broader commercial structure.
What to keep in mind
The clearest basis for this page is Femida.us's stated focus on software, SaaS, IT, licensing, technology transactions, and intellectual property matters. Those areas directly relate to many software development agreements.
Public information is still limited. It does not spell out a specific workflow, pricing, turnaround time, or a separate public service page for every type of software development contract, so the description here should remain practical and measured.
If your agreement raises questions about code ownership, licensing rights, IP transfer, work-for-hire terms, or software delivery obligations, this page is likely relevant. The next step is to discuss the contract and business setup in detail.
