PPM LAWYERS serves founders, Real Estate Offerings, fund managers, and entrepreneurs across every industry. If you are raising money from investors, we can help.
The vast majority of PPM LAWYERS clients fall into one of three categories. Each has different deal structures, investor profiles, and legal needs — and we have handled hundreds of each.
You are building a company and raising capital from angel investors, friends and family, or early-stage venture investors. Whether you are raising a priced equity round, a convertible note, or a SAFE, you need properly structured offering documents to comply with Reg D and protect yourself from day one.
You are launching a fund and raising from multiple investors into a pooled vehicle. The legal requirements are more complex than a single-asset deal — you need a fund-level PPM, LP or operating agreement, and subscription documents that reflect the fund's structure, terms, and investment strategy. This is core work for PPM LAWYERS.
You have identified a property or project and you are raising capital from investors to fund it. You need a PPM that accurately describes the offering, a subscription agreement your investors will sign, and an operating agreement that governs the LLC. We have done this hundreds of times across every real estate asset class.
PPM LAWYERS has prepared offering documents for capital raisers across virtually every industry and asset class. Securities law does not care what you are raising for — and neither do we. If you are raising capital, we can handle the legal work.
Not sure where you fit? Use your raise size to identify the right tier. All tiers include the complete core set of documents — the difference is state filing coverage, revision rounds, and attorney support hours.
Not sure which tier fits your situation? The free discovery call will clarify this in the first 10 minutes. Book yours here.
You do not need to have investors lined up before engaging. In fact, the best time to get your documents in place is before your first investor conversation — not after. Here is a practical guide.
One of the most common mistakes capital raisers make is treating fundraising as a sales activity before they have treated it as a legal one. In the U.S., raising capital from investors is a regulated securities transaction — from the first pitch.
It does not matter how well you know your investors, how transparent you are being, or how straightforward your deal is. Without proper offering documents in place, you are legally exposed.
No obligation. No hourly billing. A securities attorney will review your situation, tell you exactly what you need, and give you a firm flat-fee quote before you commit to anything.