How to Choose a Business Lawyer in Seattle
What Seattle business owners and executives should evaluate before hiring legal counsel.
What to look for
Not all business lawyers are the same. Here's what separates strategic counsel from transactional legal services.
They've operated a business, not just advised one
The best business lawyers understand P&L statements, cap tables, and board dynamics because they've lived them. Look for counsel built by entrepreneurs — lawyers who've made payroll, raised capital, and navigated growth decisions firsthand.
They speak your CFO's language
Your lawyer should sit comfortably across from your CFO, your accountant, and your banker. If they can't discuss revenue recognition, working capital, or covenant compliance without translation, they're drafting documents without understanding the business behind them.
They think in outcomes, not billable hours
Hourly billing rewards inefficiency. The right firm structures engagements around solving your problem, not maximizing time spent on it. Ask how they price work — the answer reveals whether their incentives align with yours.
They serve as a strategic partner, not a vendor
A vendor answers questions when asked. A partner anticipates issues before they surface. Look for a firm that embeds in your business — understanding your industry, your competitors, and your growth trajectory — rather than one that waits for your call.
They cover the full scope without referral chains
Growing businesses need formation, contracts, employment, IP, and eventually M&A — often simultaneously. If your lawyer has to refer you out for half your needs, you lose continuity and context. One relationship should cover everything.
They understand your industry
Generic legal advice is a commodity. The right lawyer knows your regulatory environment, your competitive landscape, and the deal terms that are standard in your sector. Industry fluency means faster execution and better judgment calls.
Questions to ask before hiring
The right questions reveal more than a website ever will. Ask these in your first consultation.
How do you structure your fees for ongoing business relationships?
Why it matters: This reveals whether the firm is built for transactional work or strategic partnership. Firms that offer retainer or subscription models are investing in your long-term success, not billing for every email.
What industries do you serve most frequently?
Why it matters: Industry concentration means pattern recognition. A firm that serves dozens of companies in your sector has seen the pitfalls before they become your problem.
How do you coordinate with my accountant and financial advisor?
Why it matters: Business legal strategy doesn't exist in a vacuum. Tax elections, entity structure, and compensation planning all require coordination. If the lawyer hasn't thought about this, they're working in isolation.
Can you walk me through a recent business transaction you handled?
Why it matters: Specifics reveal depth. Vague answers suggest limited experience. Listen for complexity, creative problem-solving, and awareness of business realities beyond the legal documents.
What happens when I need help outside your core practice area?
Why it matters: Growth creates legal needs across multiple disciplines. A firm that can handle formation, contracts, employment, and IP under one roof gives you continuity. One that refers you out for everything loses your context.
Red flags to watch for
If you encounter any of these during your search, consider it a signal to keep looking.
Why the right approach matters
Relevant Law serves Seattle businesses that need more than a law firm — they need a strategic partner who understands their operations. Our founder's background as a tech executive means we bring an operator's mindset to every business engagement. We cover your full legal scope under one relationship, coordinating across formation, contracts, employment, and transactions so nothing falls between the cracks.
Find Your Seattle OfficeThe Seattle legal landscape
Seattle's business landscape spans technology, life sciences, maritime, real estate, and professional services — creating demand for counsel that can navigate multiple industries with equal sophistication. Washington's no-income-tax environment makes entity structuring and compensation planning particularly important, and the city's position as a Pacific Rim gateway adds international commerce considerations for many businesses. Seattle's unique employment and tax environments — including the city's specific minimum wage and payroll tax requirements — layer additional complexity onto standard business operations.
More guides for Seattle
Ready to find the right fit?
Schedule a consultation with our Seattle office to discuss your needs.
Call Seattle: (425) 675-7975