What Is a Letter of Intent?
AllBusiness.com

Someone has proposed to our company that we do a letter of
intent for a potential deal. What is it, and what should I be
worried about?
A letter of intent is typically a short form letter, laying out
that two parties are thinking about doing a deal together, and
setting forth some of the key terms of the proposed deal. It is a
prelude to a full-blown agreement, to get "big picture" consensus
on a proposed relationship. The key issues in letters of intent
become:
- Is the letter of intent binding or non-binding? Are some
portions of the deal binding?
- Are you trying to lay out all of the important terms of the
deal, or will you wait to do that when you get to a definitive
agreement?
- Is there a period when the parties will exclusively negotiate
to get to a final binding agreement?
- What are the conditions to getting to a final deal?
- If there is a dispute that comes up regarding the letter of
intent, how will it get resolved (arbitration or litigation)? Where
will it get resolved, and what law will govern?
- Is one party or the other free to immediately abandon
negotiations at any time?
- What key representations and warranties is one party expecting
to get?
- What compensation is one or the other side entitled to? Is it
clearly laid out or calculable?
Read our
Nine Tips to Create Better Contracts for
guidelines that apply to your letter of intent and other crucial
business agreements. Also, to cover the legal uncertainties of
electronic communication, you might want to read the answer to the
common question,
"Can an email agreement be a binding
contract?"
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