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Folks,

I'm a non-coder raising money for a startup, and while my partner IS a coder, we'll still need to outsource the web development.

That being the case, I need to start getting ideas of how much development may cost for this idea, but I am afraid to share much about our business model, as it and the web application are pretty inseparable.

I'm open to talking to both established web development firms, as well as free-lancers. This site will require a fairly extensive back-end content management system, configured in a different way than anything I've seen out there. Therefore, it will require both design skills (possibly once freelancer or firm) but more importantly, back-end skills.

Is there a correct protocol or procedure I need to be aware of in searching for freelancers or firms, and requesting for legal protection via an Non-Disclosure Agreement?

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closed as not programming related by Daniel A. White, mjv, DVK, Rex M, Marc Gravell Oct 29 at 21:18

2 Answers

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You should get an NDA in place if it makes you feel comfortable - there are boilerplate versions available on the web. More importantly, do you have a decent functional spec? Without one the job of providing you with a half decent estimate will be next to impossible and you probably won't have thought all the way through your product.

In reality you are probably over-worrying about protecting your idea. For a start the people you talk to for outsourcing and development will be used to working with other people's IP and therefore unlikely to steal it. Secondly your idea is probably not as stealable as you think, and if it is then you have very low barriers to entry for your competition so your idea is immediately under threat, which your investors will spot too. Thirdly, even if they did steal your ideas, and even if they had signed an NDA, there's almost nothing you could do about it without spending more money than you have as a startup. I can guarantee that your potential investors will run a mile from any law suits you have hanging over you.

Bottom line, concentrate on the commercial aspects of your startup and don't worry about legal niceties at this stage. If you are raising money, do you have your revenue and cost models documented and could you provide a possible cashflow if your investors asked? NDA may feel important, but these other things are more relevant.

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My #1 suggestion, unless you or your partner is an excellent project manager, is to engage a quality consulting firm that can handle the development for you. A complex application like you're talking about will need more than just "coders", which you already know. In addition, any quality consulting firm will be more than willing to work within the restrictions of an NDA, and will very likely have a decent template for one as well.

In the interest of full disclosure, yes I do work for a consulting firm, and we have done work with startups, under NDAs, and all that good stuff.

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