Game Development Business and Legal Guide (Premier Press Game Development)

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Employ People without Getting Sued or Screwed

  1. Have an experienced local attorney review your personnel policies and develop the related contracts such as employment agreements, NDA and invention assignment agreements, and so forth. Labor law is convoluted, doubly so where it concerns creation of intellectual property, and you need an experienced attorney to be sure you follow all federal and state regulations.

  2. Have all employees sign an employment agreement.

  3. All employees should be employed on an at-will basis.

  4. Be sure all contracts have adequate assignment of invention, non-disclosure , and non- compete (where applicable ) language.

  5. Independent contractors. Don't try to pass off employees as independent contractors, or you'll end up with a painful tax problem or, worse , being legally responsible for the "contractor's" actions as an agent of the company. Follow the rules in the "Independent Contractors" section in this chapter to determine whether the contractor passes the legal tests. If so Never let a contractor start work without all applicable agreements, including a basic service contract, an NDA, an assignment of invention, and a non-compete clause where applicable.

  6. Develop an employee handbook, to be given to everyone, explaining policies on discrimination, harassment , computer privacy, confidential information, salary, and other operating policies.

  7. Document every complaint. Discrimination or harassment complaints require extra documentation (see the "Avoiding Lawsuits" section).

  8. Remember that employers can be held responsible for damage caused by employees' acts, for example, if an employee hits a pedestrian while the employee is on his way to Staples to get more printer paper for the company, the employer is liable for the accident .

  9. Get insurance. See "Rainy Days and Harassment Suits Always Get Me Down" sidebar.

NOTE

CAUTION

More dangerous is the employer's responsibility for an employee's mis appropriation of another's intellectual property. Example: your music director samples an obscure chunk of music for the soundtrack, with out clearing the sample or informing the company.The company is nonetheless subject to suit by the original composer.

Figure 4.1. The employer may be liable for infringing activities of its employees whether or not it knew of the infringement.

Why have an Employee Handbook?

NOTE

CAUTION

An employee handbook can be used against a company if it is not carefully drafted. Two main dan gers: 1. That it will be construed as creating a contract between the employee and the company; and 2. That an employer will be held liable for not following the policies (e.g. termination) to the letter.

NOTE

TIP

Include two disclaimers at the beginning and end of the book that sound something like this:

"Employer reserves the right to alter, delete, add to, or revise any and all policies contained herein without notice. This hand book is not a contract of employment and does not create any obligation whatsoever between Company and worker."

What to Include in an Employee Handbook

This is a partial list. Employee handbooks need to be reviewed by your attorney and customized for every workplace and office. It may even make sense to have a different handbook for executives than you do for other employees.

NOTE

CAUTION

You must must must have a local attorney (for every office loca tion) review your handbook for com pliance with state and federal laws.

NOTE

CAUTION

Review the handbook at least annually and make any necessary amendments ; a handbook containing outdat ed information and/or policies can be a weapon against you. Example: if the discrimination go-to person no longer works at the company, an employee could (right ly) argue that the company was not doing its utmost to protect against infractions. Be sure that any updates and amendments have written confirmation of receipt by employees.

Every employee should receive a copy of the handbook and sign a written acknowledgment that they have received, read, and understood the handbook (which acknowledgment will go into the employee's file). This acknowledgment can be very useful in later disputes by showing that employees were on notice of policies and expectations.

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