Ask HN: How does ownership of innovations work in companies?
I have heard about web consultant firms converting to saas businesses. There is also companies that claim that they got their idea when working at FAANG for instance and then started their own thing. How does this work? How can a company encourage innovations and at the same time let the employees own a part of the innovations. I would imagine that if an innovation pops up at a company, the company owns it. But that is not very attractive for the employees I assume. How does companies usually handle this?
6 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 21.5 ms ] threadThe USA and others should follow this - do not bind the mouths of the kine that tread the grain. https://taanstafl.blogspot.com/2005/02/bind-not-mouths.html
One principle is that few people will sue you over $0.00 so if you get no traction you will not get a lawsuit. If you make a billion dollar company and they want 200 million you might be mad about it but really you shouldn’t be.
You should incorporate a new company anyways for lots of other reasons.
Large consulting shops may have a better protection since they can afford lawyers and can negotiate better contracts.
Employees usually protected much better than freelancers/consultants, b/c they don't have much negotiating power over the small letters of the contract. So many NDA/non-competes might be non-enforceable in practice.