Decades of High-Stakes Experience: Philip P. Crowley brings the perspective of a counsel who has drawn on decades of experience, including his time as corporate counsel at Johnson & Johnson.
For tech and life sciences startups, the strength of a strategic plan relies entirely on the financial assumptions supporting it. In the rush to incorporate a legal entity or secure initial capital, founders often overlook a critical phase: defining financial parameters before the legal structure becomes fixed. Relying on “best-case” scenarios without prior market validation can quickly turn an innovative idea into an unviable business venture.
Without clearly defined and professionally vetted financial planning assumptions, you expose your future business to severe risks: misallocated initial capital, an inappropriate legal structure that hinders future investments, and operational bottlenecks that can drain your funds before you reach your first major milestone. Premature business formation without a clear strategy for costs and revenues often leads to structural errors that are expensive and legally complicated to correct later.
While a vision drives a startup, validated financial assumptions ensure the company can actually execute it. A well-developed pre-formation strategy defines the profitability thresholds, required capital reserves, and tax implications that must align with your goals. This proactive approach protects your burn rate and investor credibility, transforming “gut feeling” into a data-driven framework that supports long-term growth and successful pivots.
Strategic Financial Assumptions are the fundamental beliefs and projections that support your future business model before it even becomes a legal entity. Developing these assumptions is not a “one-and-done” exercise; it is a process of identifying, quantifying, and stress-testing the variables that determine your startup’s survival, such as prototype development costs, time to first revenue, and regulatory compliance expenses.
At Crowley Law, we view these assumptions as the financial compass of your organization. We move beyond simply accepting projections at face value. Instead, we construct an “Intelligence Fortress” around your roadmap by auditing market data, neutralizing founder biases, and ensuring every financial move is anchored in legal and commercial reality.
In the venture ecosystem, your “financial hygiene” and the logic behind your forecasts are under constant scrutiny. Startups face unique risks: choosing the wrong jurisdiction for incorporation can lead to tax inefficiencies, while underestimating intellectual property protection costs can drain your marketing budget before you even launch.
As your Strategic Planning and General Counsel, Crowley Law works to convert your growth hypotheses into enforceable, measurable benchmarks. Our strategy focuses on “Scenario Depth,” creating contingency plans that allow you to adjust your financial framework without losing your core investment or market position.
A custom-tailored approach to your planned assumptions provides several critical layers of protection:
Choosing where to focus your vetting efforts is a strategic decision that impacts your company’s focus and resource allocation.
Feature | Internal Assumptions | External Assumptions |
Primary Function | Operating costs, R&D speed, and founder compensation. | Interest rates, inflation, competitor behavior. |
Degree of Control | High – managed through internal decisions. | Low – requires constant market monitoring. |
Impact of Failure | Operational slowdowns and loss of team focus. | Fundamental business model failure or insolvency. |
Best For | Budget planning and setting KPIs. | Long-term scaling and exit planning. |
Pre-formation financial planning is a mosaic of legal, financial, and operational disciplines. As your Life Sciences and Tech Counsel, Crowley Law integrates these elements into a single, cohesive strategy.
Key components include:
The most common way startups lose momentum isn’t through a lack of effort; it’s through “optimism bias” during the planning phase. Maintaining a “culture of critical review” regarding financial assumptions is the first line of defense in protecting your future valuation.
Key terms locked in early include:
If your product is the ship, your financial strategy is the chart. Without a robust review, your startup is vulnerable to “sunk cost” thinking. Crowley Law’s services focus on:
Most strategic failures result from a “set and forget” mentality. Real-world pitfalls to avoid:
We don’t just “check the math”; we act as your “Strategic Guardrails.” We understand that every financial assumption must be a bridge to your next valuation inflection point.
Crowley Law LLC combines decades of corporate legal experience with personalized counsel tailored to the unique needs of startups. The firm is led by Philip P. Crowley, with over 45 years of experience, including prior service as corporate counsel at Johnson & Johnson, where he managed complex internal governance and licensing matters.
Crowley Law focuses on providing strategic, practical advice that helps founders and partners build strong structures, resolve conflicts, and navigate growth smoothly.
Because the choice of legal structure and initial capital allocation has long-term tax and legal consequences that are difficult to correct later.
It is an assumption (e.g., manufacturing cost) that, if proven false, would require a complete change in your business model’s profitability.
Yes, but it must be qualified and balanced with quantitative data to avoid individual founder bias.
We facilitate a “Red Team” exercise where we try to break each assumption to see which one is most resilient.