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I worked in a Web Development company where I help built websites, Internet Marketing (SEO, SEM, PPC, ecommerce, mailing list, etc).

Now, according to my contract/non-compete, it states I can't work on a company doing the same thing nor do something similar. Well, this makes no sense to me since, for the past year I've been working on projects that constantly got can celled due to clients not paying on time and using outdated technologies. So, in terms of experience for work, I don't got much of a portfolio to show. Now, here's the worse part -- the company don't want me to make websites in my own free time as a hobby -- basically, I can't built my own web app or websites making money on the side (mailing list, selling things, affiliates, etc). To them, they're afraid I'm copying their ideas -- but isn't that stupid since 90% of websites that money do the same thing??? How can you protect that? And if they somehow google my name and link me to a website I've built in my freetime, they were planning to acquire it and take legal action for it.

Ok, about two weeks ago, I got laid off due to budget cut...so now I can't say how much I've accomplish at the company due to projects going downhill. And if prospective employers in an interview ask me if I enjoy making websites/programming or running one on my own as a hobby, I can't show anything since my previous employer did not want me to make websites or money off it as a hobby.

How do I deal with this situation?

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I am not a lawyer. Consult a laywer for REAL advice. Non-compete contracts are often non-enforcable unless you were an officer of the company or otherwise got something significant -- more than just employment -- for signing. Also, MANY non-compete contracts are voided if you get laid off. If you are concerned about this, consult a local lawyer who is versed in employment/contract law. Good luck. – Eddie Jun 11 at 0:37

closed as not programming related by Paolo Bergantino, McWafflestix, Juan Manuel, JohnFx, Unkwntech Jun 10 at 23:56

7 Answers

vote up 9 vote down

You know at the risk of sounding nasty--I would seek advice from an employment lawyer. While people here may have some ideas, there are a lot of legal ins and outs; you really want someone who knows what they're talking about to advise you.

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Answers like this make me wish I could vote up more than once. Honestly, legal consultation should have occurred much earlier, but hopefully this is a learning experience for the next contract that comes your way. – Jonathan Fingland Jun 10 at 23:56
vote up 5 vote down

Get going and make sparkling, cool websites starting two weeks ago -- now they can't stop you. Hosting options are super-abundant and cheap (including free, e.g. google app engine). So you'll have a portfolio to show new prospective employers!

In a sense I was in a worse state in my very first job, many years ago -- my projects kept getting canceled, one after the other... and they were designs for integrated circuits, so not something I could easily undertake in my spare time or for pocket-money;-). I didn't wait to be laid off -- I decided to actively start looking for work before that happened, because a company managed that way was clearly dysfunctional. And despite a lack of portfolio I had no real trouble convincing my next employer (my first one was apparently notorious in the industry for that, ahem, "style" of theirs;-).

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vote up 3 vote down

Learn from the situation and don't be too eager to sign a CNC agreement in the future. There's not much you can do about it after the fact.

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vote up 1 vote down

You can always refuse to work for a company that requires you to sign a non-compete.

You can also choose to ignore the non-compete.

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vote up 3 vote down

1st) Congratulations for no longer working at a company with some pretty glaring employee relations issues. Apply for unemployment, and start over.

2nd) You're free to make your hobby websites again, keep that up

3rd) If you don't have a working portfolio, then you can shift the conversations with potential employers towards the theory that you know. If you have good ideas and sound judgement, that'll count for a lot.

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vote up 1 vote down

Depending on where you live, No compete clauses often do not hold up in court. Now, I don't know if you want to test that or not, but it is not written in stone.

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vote up 1 vote down

Quite simple. Without being nasty or bitter you explain:

  1. Your contract prohibited you from free-time hobby projects; and
  2. Due to the state of the economy, many of the projects you've worked on in the last year have been canned before completion due to non-payment issues.

You then go on to explain how you want to work on something that'll get out the door because its frustrating not being able to finish something.

Now, as for the clause prohibiting free-time projects, just how broad was it? Was it money-making projects or any projects? Now I AM NOT A LAWYER but depending on wording, how broad it is and your jurisdiction it might have been unenforceable. That doesn't stop companies trying. Since you no longer work there it's no longer an issue but I'd suggest refusing to sign such things in the future unless the terms are extremely narrow, like doing something which competes with the companies existing offerings or those of the company's clients that you work on.

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