Corporate Governance
GlobalB Law helps growth-stage companies and established businesses build governance frameworks that satisfy investors, regulators, and cross-border operational demands.
Sound corporate governance is not a compliance checkbox, it is the operating system of a well-run company. GlobalB Law advises boards, founders, and investors on structuring governance mechanisms that are proportionate to the company's stage, sector, and jurisdictional exposure. Our work spans Turkish Commercial Code obligations, Delaware corporate formalities, and EU governance requirements applicable to subsidiaries operating in Europe.
For startups and scale-ups, governance work typically covers board composition, reserved matters requiring shareholder approval, information rights, and the mechanics of board decision-making across multiple jurisdictions. For more mature companies, we advise on audit committee structures, related-party transaction policies, and the governance disclosures expected by institutional investors and regulators.
We also assist companies navigating governance transitions, from a founder-led model to a professional board, or from a private to a pre-IPO structure. Our cross-border experience means we can align Turkish, US, and EU governance requirements in a single coherent framework rather than treating each jurisdiction in isolation.
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常见问题
常见问题解答
What governance documents should a startup have in place before its first institutional round?
At minimum, investors will expect a shareholders' agreement (or a stockholders' agreement in a Delaware context), up-to-date articles of association, board and shareholder meeting minutes, a cap table, and a data room with organised corporate records. We help companies prepare these in a format familiar to institutional investors.
How do Turkish Commercial Code governance requirements interact with Delaware corporate law for a dual-entity structure?
The two regimes run in parallel. The Delaware parent follows US formalities, annual board and stockholder resolutions, state filings, while the Turkish subsidiary must comply with Turkish Commercial Code obligations including mandatory general assembly meetings and statutory auditor requirements. We coordinate both to avoid gaps or conflicts.
What are 'reserved matters' and why do investors insist on them?
Reserved matters are decisions that require investor or board approval above and beyond ordinary management authority, for example, issuing new shares, taking on significant debt, or selling material assets. Investors insist on them to protect their economic and governance rights between financing rounds.
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