Any agreement to form a joint venture must clearly define a number of issues, some obvious, some not. Several additional issues are specifically related to technology issues.
1) How profits and losses are divided, including determining how much must remain in the joint venture for R&D and marketing, both of which are priorities with technology products.
2) How liability issues are shared or divided. With technology products this issue is more complex than usual, since thought must be given to dealing with intellectual property infringement and misappropriation claims.
3) Who owns patents, trade secrets, and copyrights for ideas, developments, inventions, information, products, or other intellectual property, which is developed by the joint venture, if the joint venture is terminated? Who is entitled to sell, use or create new products with the intellectual property?
4) How are the trademarks and good will pertaining to the joint ventures goods or services to be shared, if the joint venture is terminated?
5) What happens if one or more of the joint venture members fail to meet their obligations?
6) How are disputes settled? There are often disputes concerning the joint venture agreement. However, there are also disputes over joint venture operations, which are not covered by the agreement. There must be a mechanism for settling those issues without disruption of the joint venture operations.
There are clearly more issues to review, than these few. However, these issues are those important to technology ventures that are often overlooked or not sufficiently thought through.