1. Contract Vulnerabilities to Audit First
Most businesses operate under contracts that were drafted years ago, reviewed superficially, or inherited from predecessors. These agreements often contain gaps, misaligned risk allocation, or language that does not reflect current operations. A business advisory attorney can help you identify which contracts carry the most exposure and which require renegotiation or clarification.
Are Your Key Vendor and Customer Agreements Protecting You?
Yes, but likely not as well as they should be. Many vendor agreements, for example, contain open-ended indemnity clauses or insurance requirements that shift risk unfairly to your company. Customer contracts often lack clear dispute-resolution language, payment terms enforcement mechanisms, or termination provisions that allow you to exit if the relationship deteriorates. Business contract advisory review typically focuses on identifying which clauses create operational friction or legal exposure. In practice, disputes most frequently arise when a contract is silent on a critical issue (e.g., what happens if a supplier cannot meet volume commitments) rather than when the contract explicitly addresses it. A practical example: a manufacturing company discovers mid-project that its supplier contract contains no force majeure language and no alternative-sourcing provision. When the supplier faces a production delay, the customer cannot compel performance, and the contract offers no remedy. Early review would have surfaced this gap and allowed the parties to negotiate a solution before crisis.
How Should You Handle Renewal and Amendment Cycles?
Treat renewals as renegotiation opportunities, not routine extensions. Many businesses simply auto-renew contracts without review, missing chances to update terms, reduce costs, or clarify ambiguities. A business advisory attorney can help you map renewal dates, flag which contracts warrant renegotiation, and draft amendment language that protects your interests without unnecessarily antagonizing counterparties. Renewal cycles also present a moment to assess whether the relationship itself remains strategic or whether you should explore alternatives.
2. Governance and Compliance Gaps
Governance refers to the internal structures, policies, and decision-making processes that guide your business. Compliance refers to adherence to applicable laws and regulations. Both are areas where gaps accumulate silently until an audit, investigation, or dispute forces visibility.
Do You Have a Clear Governance Framework in Place?
Many closely held businesses and mid-market companies operate without formal governance policies, relying instead on informal understanding or the judgment of key executives. This approach creates several risks: decision-making authority is unclear, there is no documented basis for major transactions, and if a dispute arises (e.g., a shareholder challenge or a third-party claim), you cannot point to a board resolution or policy that authorized the decision. A business advisory attorney can help you establish or refine governance structures, including board or management committee charters, conflict-of-interest policies, and approval matrices for major expenditures or contracts. The goal is not bureaucracy; it is clarity and defensibility.
What Compliance Obligations Are You Missing?
Compliance exposure varies by industry, size, and jurisdiction, but common areas include employment law (wage and hour, classification, accommodation), data privacy (CCPA, GDPR if you have EU customers), environmental regulations, and industry-specific licensing or reporting. Many businesses discover compliance gaps only when they face an audit or employee complaint. A business advisory attorney can help you conduct a compliance audit, identify which obligations apply to your operations, and prioritize remediation. In our experience, the most cost-effective approach is to address compliance gaps proactively rather than reactively; the cost of retroactive correction (back pay, fines, legal defense) far exceeds the cost of upfront alignment.
3. Managing Regulatory and Transactional Risk
Beyond internal governance, businesses face external regulatory pressure and must navigate transactions (acquisitions, financing, partnerships) that introduce legal complexity. A business advisory attorney helps you evaluate these risks and structure responses.
Should You Conduct a Risk Assessment before a Major Transaction?
Yes. Before you acquire another company, take on significant debt, or enter a strategic partnership, a risk assessment—sometimes called due diligence—helps you understand what you are buying or committing to. This assessment typically covers contracts, compliance status, litigation history, and financial accuracy. The cost of a thorough pre-transaction review is modest compared to the cost of discovering problems after closing. For example, a buyer might discover post-closing that the seller has undisclosed employment claims, unpaid taxes, or breached customer contracts. These liabilities often fall to the buyer, and the damage is difficult to recover. Early due diligence surfaces these issues and allows you to adjust purchase price, negotiate escrow arrangements, or walk away.
How Does New York Court Practice Affect Your Business Disputes?
If your business operates in New York or has significant customer or vendor relationships here, disputes may end up in New York courts. New York courts, including the Commercial Division of the Supreme Court in Manhattan and the Appellate Division, apply specific procedural rules and substantive law that affect how disputes unfold. For instance, New York courts have developed robust case law on non-compete agreements, which are enforceable only if they are reasonable in scope, duration, and geography. If you have non-competes in place (with employees or in sale-of-business agreements), a New York court will scrutinize them carefully, and an overly broad non-compete may be struck down entirely. Understanding these rules early—ideally before you draft or sign a contract—allows you to structure language that will survive judicial review. Business advisory counsel familiar with New York practice can help you anticipate how courts will interpret your agreements and adjust language accordingly.
4. What Should You Do Next?
The framework for productive business advisory work is straightforward: identify your highest-risk contracts and relationships, audit your governance and compliance posture, and assess whether upcoming transactions or regulatory changes require structural adjustment. Most decision-makers benefit from a conversation with a business advisory attorney to scope these issues and prioritize action. The goal is not to create legal overhead; it is to ensure that your legal structure, contracts, and policies support your business strategy rather than constrain or expose it. Business advisory counsel can help you build this foundation and refine it as your business evolves. Consider whether your current legal resources—whether in-house or external—are equipped to address these areas holistically, and whether a structured advisory engagement would give you clearer visibility into your risk profile and options.
09 Apr, 2026

