A practical guide to fit, confidentiality, engagement terms, and how WestBridge Counsel works with technology companies.
No. Using this site, sending a message, or receiving an initial response does not create an attorney-client relationship. That relationship begins only after conflicts are cleared and a written engagement agreement is signed.
Keep it high level: your company, the legal question or business decision, the general timeline, and the service area you think fits. Do not include confidential, privileged, or highly sensitive information before engagement.
United States technology companies, and technology companies worldwide that need United States counsel. That includes startups, SaaS and AI companies, growth-stage technology companies, and enterprise legal teams needing specialist support.
Fee structures depend on the work. Discrete projects may be scoped as fixed-fee engagements. Recurring or embedded support may fit a retainer or fractional general counsel arrangement. Fees are agreed in writing before work begins.
Yes. WestBridge Counsel provides legal services under the supervision of appropriately licensed counsel, and matters touching other jurisdictions are handled under applicable multijurisdictional-practice rules and, where a jurisdiction's local law applies, with locally licensed counsel.
Yes, where the document sits inside the firm's focus. Single-contract reviews are often appropriate for DPAs, SaaS agreements, vendor terms, technology licenses, AI terms, and transaction documents.
Sometimes the role is fractional general counsel. Other times it is overflow capacity or specialist depth for an existing legal team. The right structure depends on cadence, risk, and how the legal function already works.
Yes. Technology is used for leverage on routine work, but legal judgment remains counsel's responsibility. Client information is handled under the confidentiality, security, and professional obligations that govern the engagement.