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Non-Competition Clause 2121 Responses
Last post: 5 months ago | Thread started: May 9, 08, 10:03 a.m.
- designer4rent
So has any employer ever asked you to sign one, and for it to last for 24 months. Mine has 12 months of not working for any company in the entertainment industry after leaving, is this right or possible. Plus working on the side has to claimed and sanctioned (per project) by the company?
advice?
- May 9, 08, 10:03 a.m. – Permalink
- designer4rent
noooo! somebody else lol.


- Dog-earMay 9, 08, 10:07 a.m. – Permalink
- acescence
i've been asked to sign them, in california no less, where it is technically not legal. i think it has more to do with you not stealing their ideas and taking them somewhere else. i personally wouldn't really worry about signing it, if they really wanted to blow serious lawyer coin enforcing this, they are fucking stupid. disclaimer: i am not a lawyer.


- Dog-earMay 9, 08, 10:08 a.m. – Permalink
- ninjasavant
I work in software, I can't work for or aid other competing tech companies for as long as I work here. I don't have any restrictions on working after I leave though.


- Dog-earMay 9, 08, 10:08 a.m. – Permalink
- harlequino
Generally they just mean that you can't poach their clients after you're gone.
Or, in other cases - say you work on a specific web campaign for Mastcrd, for example. You can't leave and work on the same campaign doing the same exact job someplace else.
They are standard.

- Dog-earMay 9, 08, 10:09 a.m. – Permalink
- designer4rent
problem is I am starting a company with brains no less. This would be a problem. Plus the money for this job is hilarious and really not enough to govern my creative time.


- Dog-earMay 9, 08, 10:11 a.m. – Permalink
- VectorMasked
I refused to sign one that was good for 6 months. They started with 12 months though and then 6 and I said "nope". They didn't even put up a fight and worked together without problems.
Those things suck and I'll always try reasoning before signing one.


- Dog-earMay 9, 08, 10:12 a.m. – Permalink
- designer4rent
I think I won't sign it. This isn't a permanent situation either.

- Dog-earMay 9, 08, 10:13 a.m. – Permalink
- MrDinky
You can always argue that the contract deprives you of your livelihood. The word entertainment industry is very ambiguous.
It really depends on the company to exercise their rights. Most do not. It would be unrealistic to have that contract, which is standard, and exercise it in every profession then every one would be looking for different industry everytime. You can always ask them to narrow it down to specific direct competitors but that might cause more suspicion.As for working on the side, as long is it does not interfere with normal working business it should not matter. Also, if you are getting work from direct clients / former clients / or competitor on the out side of the norm.
In most cases, companies do not exercise it unless, you steal work / client, take others with you when you leave, you work directly to competitor where there is insider knowledge or information.
Dont worry too much about it.

- Dog-earMay 9, 08, 10:15 a.m. – Permalink
- designer4rent
man this is tough, I don't want to steal anything. I just feel this is unreasonable.


- Dog-earMay 9, 08, 10:28 a.m. – Permalink

