For companies built between France and the United States.

The value of a company has shifted. It no longer rests solely on fixed assets or goodwill, but on a triptych that has become inseparable: intellectual property, corporate structuring and market exposure.
This conviction stems from a simple observation: as the value of intangible assets grows, it merges with the value of the company itself. Brands, technologies, design, data, internal organisation and the storytelling of the offer are no longer peripheral, but the heart of the economic asset. The way a company is structured, financed and governed directly conditions the protection, exploitation and transmission of those assets.
Added value no longer resides solely in capital or technology, but in the ability of teams to create and to sell. Create solutions, products, experiences; sell offers that are clear, secured and scalable. A law firm must therefore concentrate on these two movements: to protect and to organise.



Romain Waïss-Moreau practised for 13 years at leading firms before establishing his own Law firm. He works at the intersection of corporate law and intellectual property, for founders, executives and investors whose operations span France and the United States.
His conviction: intellectual property is not a technical subject reserved for specialists. It is the strategic asset that determines the value of a company. Every executive should be able to grasp it clearly, in the same firm where they handle their corporate work.
You set out your situation. We identify what structures your perimeter, what weakens it, and which decision should be taken first.