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  • videocam On-Demand
  • card_travel Commercial Law
  • schedule 90 minutes

Drafting Transition-Out Provisions in SaaS Agreements: Performance Requirements, Triggering Events, Fees, Damages

  • videocam On-Demand
  • card_travel Commercial Law
  • schedule 90 minutes
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Description

Increasingly SaaS customers are asking for detailed transition-out provisions in SaaS agreements. If such terms are not included in a SaaS agreement, the customer's counsel should consider whether adding these terms will protect a client's interests upon termination of the customer relationship.

When it comes to drafting the transition-out obligations, a customer contract drafter should consider the nature of the services and the impact of any termination. Where appropriate, customer's counsel should clearly define performance requirements for the service provider, as well as avoid broad standards of performance phrases such as "commercially reasonable efforts." The transition provision should set clear fee obligations to avoid changing rates during the transition.

When drafting a service provider contract, counsel should include terms that allow the customer to trigger the transition-out clause whenever an expiration or termination occurs, except perhaps where termination is due to the customer's non-payment of fees. Service providers may establish flexible fees in long-term engagements that contemplate market changes. Service providers should consider whether a customer can demand the return of its data in a specified format, and counsel should include terms addressing the administrative costs of this task.

Counsel for both clients and service providers must include how to return the client's data and how confidential information for the parties is handled and how it is returned or destroyed.

Listen as our expert panel discusses critical terms in the transition-out provisions of a SaaS agreement and how to clarify the language so that all stakeholders' interests are protected.

Presented By

William S. Galkin
Attorney
Galkin Law, LLC

Mr. Galkin is an information technology and internet lawyer who has dedicated his legal practice to representing internet, e-commerce, information technology and new media businesses across the U.S. and around the world. He serves as a trusted adviser to startup, emerging, established and multinational corporations on their core commercial transactions including corporate formation and transitions, intellectual property, technology and software development, licensing, transfer, and distribution,  regulatory compliance, as well as agreements for online businesses, including, SaaS offerings, website terms of use, privacy policies,  development agreements, affiliate agreements and sweepstakes/contest rules and compliance. Mr. Galkin’s broad experience gained during more than 20 years in practice allows him to provide cutting-edge, creative and efficient solutions to complex problems.

Stephanie Quinones
Shareholder
Gunster

Ms. Quinones regularly counsels entrepreneurs and in-house counsel on business contracting, technology and intellectual property licensing, and internet/social media and privacy issues. She provides strategic advice to businesses in all stages of the business cycle, including structuring and restructuring, raising capital, day-to-day operations, and purchase and sale transactions. Ms. Quinones’ representative clients include start-ups and emerging growth companies, technology companies (SaaS providers and IP licensors and licensees), middle market companies, and product distributors.

Larry Schultis
Founding Partner
Schultis Law Group, PLLC

Mr. Schultis focuses on IP transactions, and has substantial experience representing both technology consumers and vendors and a wide variety of service providers. He represents large customers in outsourcing arrangements including one of the world's largest financial institutions, a big four accounting firm, major health care providers and utilities. Prior to founding his firm, he spent a decade as a partner at Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP, focusing on IP transactions.

Credit Information
  • This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.


  • Live Online


    On Demand

Date + Time

  • event

    Tuesday, February 15, 2022

  • schedule

    1:00 p.m. ET./10:00 a.m. PT

  1. Software as a service agreement
    1. Customer considerations
      1. Scope of services
      2. Triggering events
      3. Fees
    2. Service provider considerations
      1. Flexible fees
      2. Administrative costs
      3. Return of data
      4. Handling confidential information

The panel will address these and other key topics:

  • What are the key considerations that a customer will want in a transition-out provision of a SaaS agreement?
  • What are the key considerations that a service provider will want in a transition-out provision of a SaaS agreement?
  • How is data returned to the customer during a transition-out period?
  • What should customers and providers include regarding fees and damages in transition-out provisions?