13
5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job This is not legal advice, which must be based on individual circumstances. This is legal information, and general career and negotiating advice based on the general trend of state contract law. This law varies among states and other U.S. jurisdictions. Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin page 1 of 13

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

This is not legal advice, which must be based on individual circumstances. This is legal information, and general career and negotiating advice based on the general trend of state contract law. This law varies among states and other U.S. jurisdictions.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

page 1 of 13

Page 2: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

Seventy percent of tech engineers surveyed were told they would have to sign a noncompete agreement only after they accepted a job offer. One-half were told this only after they started working. See "Matthew Marx: Noncompete agreements and their impact on employees", Oct. 27, 2011 at http://bit.ly/1GaGdlD.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

page 2 of 13

Page 3: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

"Matthew Marx: Noncompete agreements and their impact on employees", Oct. 27, 2011 at http://bit.ly/1GaGdlD.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

page 3 of 13

Page 4: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

Matthew Marx of MIT also found that one-third of tech workers he surveyed switched to different industries in new jobs, many losing skills and contacts, and taking pay cuts. Efforts to avoid violations of their noncompete agreements appeared to set in motion negative career detours. See "Matthew Marx: Non-compete agreements and their impact on employees", Oct. 27, 2011 at http://bit.ly/1GaGdlD.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

Photo by blondinrikard page 4 of 13

Page 5: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

Noncompete agreements are governed by state contract law. Employers say that they use noncompete agreements, rather than patent and trade secret protections, because they are easier to enforce.  Data shows, however, that the threat of noncompete enforcement drives patent holders from states that enforce them to states that do not, like California. This is especially true for the highest-performing inventors. Whatever employers gain by threatening to enforce noncompetes could be, in the long run, less than they lose by driving away their best network of former employees and their pool of potential recruits.  See "Regional Disadvantage? Non-Compete Agreements and Brain Drain" at http://stanford.io/1qfoXrq.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

Photo by Richard Masoner / Cyclelicious page 5 of 13

Page 6: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

Michigan banned noncompetes from 1905 to 1985. Detroit overtook New York and Chicago as the auto manufacturing leader by 1920. Firms started by employees leaving other firms led the way - like Dodge (from Ford) and Chevrolet, Chrysler and Lincoln (from General Motors).  California has banned noncompetes since 1872. In 1956, New York, Los Angeles and Boston were the centers of semiconductor manufacturing. Northern California had none. By 1975, Silicon Valley had 15% more high-tech employment than Boston's Route 128. The gap has widened since then.  While noncompete enforcement is not the only factor driving this employment growth, firms founded by former employees of semiconductor makers became the largest of these firms. One study found a "brain drain" of patent holder employees from states that enforce noncompetes to states that do not. See "Regional Disadvantage? Non-Compete Agreements and Brain Drain", July 7, 2011 at http://stanford.io/1qfoXrq.  Another study suggests that the greater success of high-tech clustering in the U.S. compared to Canada might be related to Canadian law that restricts managers from defecting to competing firms. See "Non-compete covenants: Incentives to innovate or impediments to growth", Oct. 5, 2010 at http://bit.ly/1vAdAWU.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

Photo by blacque_jacques page 6 of 13

Page 7: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

These are approximations taken from "Inside-Out: Regional Networks and Industrial Adaptation in Silicon Valley and Route 128", May 1996, Cityscape at http://bit.ly/1w9Ltmq.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

page 7 of 13

Page 8: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

California, North Dakota and Oklahoma do not enforce employee noncompete agreements. In other states, a "reasonableness" test is applied to them. In order to be enforced, a noncompete must be reasonable in the scope of employee activities covered, in its geographic scope, and in its time period.   If an employer insists on a noncompete, you should ask that it be limited to the same kind of work that was done for that employer, defined as narrowly as possible. See Every1's Guide to Electronic Contracts, Part A, Chapter 7 d) II) at http://amzn.to/1vLbmcj.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

Photo by wwwuppertal page 8 of 13

Page 9: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

A hairstylist in Massachusetts lost a lawsuit filed by his former employer after taking a job at another salon, even though he was fired by the former employer. His noncompete required him to wait 12 months before working at any salon in nearby towns. A judge issued an injunction ordering him to stop working at his new employer. See "Noncompete Clauses Increasingly Pop Up in Array of Jobs", June 8, 2014 at http://nyti.ms/1rOfV07.  A different Massachusetts salon sued a former hairstylist for violating a non-solicitation agreement by posting her new salon employment on Facebook. The judge refused to order her to stop working at the new salon, because he said the Facebook post was not a solicitation of her old salon customers. See Invidia, LLC v. DiFonzo, at http://1.usa.gov/1w6jeF2.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

Photo by Movie-Fan page 9 of 13

Page 10: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

When a court judges the reasonableness of a noncompete, it balances the public interest, as well as the former employee's interest, against the employer's. A former employer should not be able to stop a former employee from working where it has no existing competition.   If there is a strong public interest in having the employee's services (like medical care) available, a court is likely to view less favorably a geographic scope that prohibits those services by a former employee. A geographic scope that only temporarily inconveniences an employee who provides widely available services is more likely to be approved.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

Photo by andrew c mace page 10 of 13

Page 11: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

California will not enforce employee noncompete agreements made in California or elsewhere. An employee bound by a noncompete made in another state can move to California, and it will not be enforced against him by a California court. See Application Group Inc. v. Hunter Group Inc. (1998) at http://bit.ly/12Z4flG.  Even if an employee never moves to California, a noncompete should not prohibit competition anywhere in the U. S. It will probably be found to be unreasonable, because it could force the worker to leave the country.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

Photo by NinJA999 page 11 of 13

Page 12: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

The arguments for noncompetes are that they: 1) give employers an incentive to invest in training their workers, and 2) create incentives to invest in existing companies, because they are easier to enforce than patent and trade secret protections.  The arguments against noncompetes are that they: 1) discourage high-growth "spin out" companies formed by former employees, 2) reduce the pool of skilled, high-wage workers in enforcing states, 3) reduce the sharing of industry knowledge, and 4) discourage employees from investing in their own skill development. See "Business Booms Where Employee Noncompete Agreements are Banned, Fed Study Infers, But Use in U.S. Grows" Dec. 4, 2014 at http://bit.ly/1AW0MPQ.   The longer the duration of a noncompete period, the more an employer must show that it is necessary to protect its legitimate interests.

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

Photo by Jack Snell - USA page 12 of 13

Page 13: 5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

5 Things to Do Before You Start A New Job

Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that's simple, beautiful and fun. By Charles Martin

page 13 of 13