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So you have that awesome idea for an app that you think will be very successful and is not technically difficult to make (but a struggle to do yourself because you're not that good yet)

How would you go about finding a developer that's willing to hop on board, and how would you protect yourself from that developer just taking that idea for themselves?

This is a hypothetical question, but I'm wondering what are some thoughts on the subject.

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10 Answers

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Your best bet is probably to talk to a lawyer, preferably one that specializes in this sort of thing.

I expect they could help you come up with a set of contracts/agreements to be signed by anyone that you hire. (You'll probably end up with some sort of Non-Disclosure Agreement and employment contract with a Non-Compete clause)

The key for your particular question is the Non-Compete clause, which

... is a term used in contract law under which one party (usually an employee) agrees to not pursue a similar profession or trade in competition against another party (usually the employer)

An honest developer should be okay signing this sort of contract, as long as it is fair. (This sort of thing is pretty standard)

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Bump. Non-disclosure and non-compete are bread & butter. – Chris Mar 15 at 3:42
I have no problems signing a non-disclosure but I would never sign a non-compete unless I have equal ownership of the company/project or am being employed full-time with benefits. – webdtc Mar 15 at 5:16
@webdtc: I think a fair non-compete is usually time limited... – Daniel LeCheminant Mar 15 at 5:29
Good answer Daniel. I agree, a simple contractual agreement should clear up any doubts he has and help put his mind at ease. – Simucal Mar 15 at 6:27
Most good programmers I know refuse to sign non-competes. Unless the opportunity is truly fantastic, they limit your future opportunities too significantly. – Scotty Allen Mar 15 at 23:23
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I would like to add that I came to the conclusion that its probably better/easier/cheaper (at least for some situations) to disguise the 'punchline'... make the description of the idea pretty generic, with enough specs to understand the scope of the project, but leave the 'special sause' for after you establish some sort of relationship/trust.

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Don't hire someone, Partner with them. That way you're both in for the ride.

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Thats what lots of people seem to expect. "Hey you develop this site for me, I'm not a programmer. You do all the work and you get to own 50%". Somehow not a bargain. – Steve Kemp Mar 15 at 23:23
I'd say getting someone to write it is half of the work and getting people aware of it and using it is the other half. I'll gladly stick to writing code and let others worry about the rest! – adam Aug 2 at 18:11
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You could enter into a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) with the developer.

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Let me tell you, it's never* the idea that makes something a success. It's the execution.

How many times did sites like Facebook pop up before Facebook blew up? How many people wanted to develop social networking sites, but failed, and we never heard of them? There's plenty we have heard of (Friendster, Live Journal, Orkut), and even then, they failed.

There are very, very few new ideas. Ideas are a dime a dozen. Sorry. Having an idea and making it a reality have nothing in common.

How many people are able to see those ideas to fruition? If your idea is good, you should share it with everyone possible. Get feedback and input, because you're never as smart, or in-tune to your market as you hope you are, or as others are.

If you're going to be successful, it's how you take your idea to market, not whom you share it with.

*Okay, okay, not very often.

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Your choice of DHL as an example was probably not a good one :| – Daniel LeCheminant Mar 15 at 3:33
Yeah, I just realized how they had, what, 10K layoffs? – Chris Mar 15 at 3:34
And left the US market... economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12607051/… – Daniel LeCheminant Mar 15 at 3:34
Guess that's what happens when you only get a few grand in start-up funding vs. tens, hundreds, or millions of dollars: DOOM! ;) – Chris Mar 15 at 3:39
amen. see: thedailywtf.com/Articles/Rolling-in-the-Money.aspx/… for details. – gbjbaanb Mar 15 at 23:33
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"an app that you think will be very successful"

Most developers lack the "soft skills" necessary to make an application successful. If you hire a technically proficient developer most likely he/she will be delighted to leave the financing, sales, marketing, planning, etc to you while they hammer away at bringing your spec to life. In other words the success of you app depends very largely upon your ability to bring it effectively to market, NOT on your ability to protect yourself from your employees.

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Just to put forth an alternative answer: if it's just an informal thing and you don't want to (or can't, for whatever reason) involve contracts and lawyers and so on, try getting some experience with the relevant language(s)/framework(s)/platform(s) on a more mundane project. Then maybe you will be able to do it yourself. (This also assumes that it's not something you need urgently)

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If it's really easy to implement with just the idea, you don't have to worry about your employees stealing it. As soon as you launch, everyone else can steal it too. If it's a good idea, they will.

You can protect yourself a little with an NDA and a good employment contract, but mostly you should just look for people you think you can trust. If you worry too much about being stolen from, your idea will fail because you won't give your employees enough power and trust to do it right.

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When you hire someone, make sure they sign a non-disclosure agreement as part of the contract. While this legally protects you, in the end there's nothing that can prevent that individual from writing something similar ... or telling someone else how to do it.

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Telling someone else how to do it would be "disclosing" (in violation of the NDA) – Daniel LeCheminant Mar 15 at 3:24
Daniel - you're right, but unfortunately it happens all the time when you hire people you don't know. Plus, there's no easy way to prove that someone shared their inside information. If everyone was ethical in this world, we'd have legions of lawyers looking for work (along with other careers). – LuckyLindy Mar 16 at 4:52
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Nondisclosure agreements, employment contracts, and noncompete clauses protect you to at least some degree, although you should consult a lawyer for the specific case of your jurisdiction.

That said, you shouldn't be working with people you don't trust on at least some level. Would you hand a complete stranger your wallet and PINs?

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