Questions and answers from the program addressing issues such as due diligence, agency relationships, payments, scope of work, domain names and more.
Increasingly, companies move labor intensive activities to inexpensive countries or enter into franchise agreements or comparable arrangements, while keeping the ownership of rights, brands and other intellectual property. Apart from already existing brand piracy issues, these arrangements increasingly lead to suspicions and litigation that call for independent fact finding. In this session key aspects of utilizing outside investigative fraud and litigation expertise in brand protection situations were covered.
This Participants' Briefing Book includes a discussion outline and suggested resources on the topic of strategic implementation of law department technologies from ACC's Law Department Executive Leadership group.
Reviews the role of the audit committee, best practices in selecting members, guidelines for committee action, and future concerns about audit committees.
Brief outline on how to promote strong business ethics within a multi-national corporation.
You receive a high profile assignment to work closely with the CFO and other senior management to prepare your company for an IPO. If you don't know where to start or what's in store for you, this panel is for you! This program will cover the laws related to the Form S-1, working with underwriters, setting up your company for 34 Act, SOX and stock exchange compliance, pre-IPO publicity and road show mechanics. You will take home a valuable checklist, resource list and forms to use in your own IPO, plus practical compliance tips, a better understanding of the process, and insights to help avoid pitfalls and panic along the way.
"Patent litigation" - unfamiliar venues, strange procedures, and crippling potential downsides often come to mind with these words, and companies’ patent dockets continue to expand. This panel of patent litigation veterans will draw from their experiences to help you better address your next patent case, from practical tips to new case law that will drive the cutting edge of this important topic.
The web is no longer the exclusive domain of techies and start-up companies and as in-house counsel for your company, it's your responsibility to ensure that as you branch out to do business online, you are compliant with any trademark or copyright regulations. This overview will give you the legal knowledge you need to successfully provide the legal advice your corporation needs to effectively do business on the web. Specific topics to be addressed include Digital Millennium Copyright Act notices, IP implications of purchasing search keywords, copyright violations and third party liability, buying and selling domain names, cybersquatting, UDRP proceedings and much more.
If you’re the CLO of a private company, you know that your job is to balance the increasingly difficult demands of how to be effective in an entrepreneurial or closed/family environment with less public compliance regulation but increasingly high expectations from financiers/investors, banks, insurers, suppliers, customers, regulators, and other stakeholders. This program will help CLOs for private companies become more astute risk managers, discuss strategies for sensitizing the board and senior management to the need for a "public company-type" compliance focus, and offer ideas for improving the relationship between board, management, lawyers and those who regulate the company.
Consider this session Labor Law 101 as your employment specialist peers provide an update on what is happening in the labor scene throughout the country and how this affects your business. Learn about the absolute essentials to maintain a union free workplace and how best to manage your work place when you are partially or fully unionized. Take this opportunity to really focus in on your business needs based on the make up of your work force.
Privilege is one of the hottest topics on the minds of corporate practitioners these days. With the internet used as a primary means of communication in today’s fast-paced business environment, in-house lawyers may find themselves in ethical and legal trouble as they do deals all over the world without knowledge of the laws relating to privilege. This comparison of solicitor client privilege in the US, Canada, Europe, and Asia will provide in-house counsel with a solid overview of the laws they should consider when doing deals outside of their jurisdiction and send you home with a checklist to use in future activities.
Big shots make headlines. And lately, the news has not been good. From Enron to Worldcom and beyond, high profile scandals have rocked the executive suite. These scandals dramatically demonstrate the consequences of having a small group of executives who do not live up to the organization’s standard of behavior. Changing big shots’ behavior is a critical risk management issues, but it isn’t easy. As an in-house practitioner, you need to use your most persuasive advocacy skills to convince your company’s leaders of the need to behave appropriately and in line with the organization’s mission, vision, and values. This entertaining, interactive presentation will provide you with the tools you need to get your big shots to listen, understand, and behave.
Annual Meeting 2006: Let's face it. Being corporate counsel is probably the toughest job in the legal profession. The demands of dealing with executives, staff, and outside attorneys can make even the most balanced person want to go ‘legal.’ In this light-hearted approach to a very serious topic, we’ll teach you about the harmful effects of stress on your physical and emotional well-being and share the three steps to a more stress-free career including how to get a clue, get a grip, and get a life!
Presented by Bass, Berry & Sims, a Lex Mundi member firm for the ACC Tennessee Chapter.
Our outstanding panel of in-house counsel will share their list of things they were glad they knew-or wished they'd known-when starting out. Gain guidance in such key areas as employment law, intellectual property issues, corporate governance, securities law, and litigation. Plus here’s your chance to ask questions about issues not covered during the meeting’s other sessions.
It's all a numbers game. The business people often complain that the lawyers do not understand the numbers, so come learn how to prove them wrong. Using real-world examples, this session will provide a review of legal accounting requirements, an overview of the basic financial principles of running a corporation and a checklist to become more proficient when dealing with financial matters.
Corporate attorneys practicing within the EU need to be intimately familiar with competition laws and how they could affect a company's business. This overview of the trends EU competition is following will provide you with a clear understanding of the laws and guidance on how best to counsel your corporate client.
You've taken the plunge and are determined to build a dedicated compliance function. Explore key strategies and tactics for structuring and maintaining a compliance program that fosters ethical, legal, and productive operations while also minimizing business risk. Review the impact of recent legal and business developments on compliance strategy. Learn how to maintain leadership buy-in and commitment, and avoid common pitfalls that make a compliance program difficult to maintain.
Recent cases have made the news, even gone all the way to the Supreme Court, about what must be kept, what can be shredded, and when. Discovery orders during litigation and government investigations complicate the issue. We all know some of the theory, but hear from our experts some practical tips about how to develop, implement and maintain an effective recordkeeping policy and how to comply with the growing burden of record retention.
Everyone likes to talk about "partnerships" with outside counsel, but often we do not focus on building effective and mutually beneficial relationships. Learn how to work effectively with your outside counsel. Topics will include ethical issues and requirements for engagements, billing, and legal work product.
How can you get the best out of your IT? Where should you invest for the future? What technological advances can provide real working efficiencies? What are the risks when you rely on computer systems for legal work? Some legal departments have put IT at the center of their world, but others are more wary. Can machines do a lawyer’s job? Join us for a discussion on the best in class use of technology to drive savings and free up time.
What does it mean to be a business leader? What are the necessary skills and competencies? Are lawyers well suited to this role or should these functions be kept separate? What makes a good lawyer become an exceptional leader? How can you make the transition? Our panel of distinguished speakers will share their invaluable experiences and observations on the role and potential of the in-house lawyer.
The dynamics of today's global economy affect virtually every employer. The issues a company must face are similar from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, but the solutions often are quite different. Our in-house experts will examine such labor topics as integrating the workforce after a merger or acquisition, hiring and firing, obtaining work authorizations, and understanding foreign jurisdiction workplace laws and regulations. Explore these and other matters a global workforce presents and take home real world solutions to apply to your own employment challenges.
What does a sensible company do about document retention? This question is on the minds of corporate practitioners around the world as recent legal developments have put these corporate policies in the spotlight. Join your peers to learn what you should keep, what you can happily destroy, policies on saving emails and other strategic retention procedures.
A PowerPoint of the February 28, 2006 program on Key Competition/Antitrust Issues in Canada-U.S. Cross-Border Merger Notification and Review.
A must-attend for any in-house employment and labor practitioner. Leaders in the employment and labor legal arena will update you on the most important federal and state court decisions as well as legislative initiatives impacting in-house practitioners and their companies.
If your company sells products or services to customers outside the U.S., the company is subject to an array of export, customs, and other regulations. These regulations are broader than most organizations realize. If you don't understand the terms "dual use" or "deemed export," you may be violating export control laws. This basics program will update you on the rules you need to know to protect your company from exposure. Our panel of export experts will provide a refresher on what exactly is considered to be an export, remind you that exporting isn't necessarily shipping products overseas, and teach you how to establish a proper compliance program to provide training to your corporate management.
No domestic company doing business internationally wants to be subjected to the risk of litigating in a foreign court, yet many are. Arbitration can be a useful and more predictable mechanism to resolve international disputes. Do you want to learn how to influence procedure and obtain a decision that is enforceable around the world? If so, go to this program. This interactive panel of your peers will focus on the material aspects of drafting a legally enforceable international arbitration agreement including clause selection, and choice of forum, and will cover actual handling of the arbitration once it begins.
Even if you can fly, dealing with business units around the world is tough for a compliance superhero. Learn how to help your company use compliance as a competitive advantage internationally. This program will examine leading multinational compliance programs, including a discussion about the tensions between compliance and decentralized international management structures, types of international risks, and tools that are available to assist you.
This session will provide unique solutions both at home and abroad. Successfully doing business in other countries requires knowledge of the differences among various regulatory schemes, understanding the worldwide web of MOU's, mutual assistance and cooperation agreements amongst international regulators, and working constructively with them. This session will examine regulatory aspects of doing business in various jurisdictions, with an emphasis on practical advice about dealing with the local regulators, information swapping amongst regulators, and lessons from other jurisdictions that may be applicable in yours. Learn from these international representatives the legal do's and don'ts of working with regulators to achieve success for your company on a global scale.
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