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When one of our China lawyers is contacted to “draft a contract” we usually must first determine whether it is time to draft the contract or not. For example, if a client wants us to draft an OEM Agreement to have its widgets manufactured by Chinese Company A, there is no point in our even starting on such an agreement if the parties are not even close to agreeing on the price for those widgets.
We often find ourselves giving clients and even potential clients a list of the items on which they should reach agreement before they pay us to draft their agreement. There have been plenty of times where we as lawyers have been able to bridge the gap between our client and a Chinese company to make a deal happen, but there are some gaps we simply cannot bridge. If a Chinese manufacturer insists on charting $5 per widget and our client will pay no more than $3 per widget, there will be no deal and there is no point in our drafting an agreement as though there will be one.
But on something more complicated like a Joint Venture deal, where neither side is usually familiar with common terms, we often start drafting the joint venture agreement before the parties have reached a clear agreement, in part to help the parties determine what remains for them to agree upon for an agreement to get signed.
Licensing agreements are usually more complicated than manufacturing agreements but less complicated than joint venture agreements and I was recently cc’ed on an email from one of our China lawyers to a potential client contemplating licensing its technology and brand name to a company in China. This email was in response to the potential client having requested we help them with the “things we should be doing to prepare for our upcoming meeting with our potential licensee.” The email list was as follows:
Once they have reached tentative oral agreement on the above, we can start drafting the licensing agreement.
The post Nine Tips for China Licensing appeared first on China Law Blog.
We will be discussing the practical aspects of Chinese law and how it impacts business there. We will be telling you what works and what does not and what you as a businessperson can do to use the law to your advantage. Our aim is to assist businesses already in China or planning to go into China, not to break new ground in legal theory or policy.