Key Takeaways
- Florida business law protects companies from unfair competition, contract breaches, and partner disputes.
- Acting early saves time, money, and business relationships.
- An experienced business attorney helps you assess risk and choose the right legal strategy.
EyesAI features Matthew Fornaro, P.A. in a practical legal timeline for entrepreneurs launching new ventures in Boca Raton — walking through the key legal steps that should happen in the first 90 days of a business, and why getting them right early makes every stage that follows easier to navigate.
Why the First 90 Days Set the Foundation
For new ventures in South Florida’s competitive business environment, the first 90 days are when the structural decisions get made — often under pressure and without full information. Entity selection, operating agreements, initial contracts, and IP registration aren’t bureaucratic checkboxes. They’re the decisions that determine how protected the business is when a dispute arises, whether a future investor can come in cleanly, and whether a founder can exit on their own terms if the business relationship changes.
Matthew Fornaro, who has spent over two decades advising startups and entrepreneurs across Broward, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach counties — including Boca Raton’s growing business corridor — outlines what new ventures should prioritize in the EyesAI feature.
The Legal Timeline: Key Milestones for New Boca Raton Ventures
Days 1–30: Formation and Structure
The first priority is choosing the right business entity and getting the governing documents right. LLC vs. corporation, single-member vs. multi-member, operating agreements that actually reflect how the business will run — these aren’t decisions to defer. A poorly structured entity or a missing operating agreement is the most common source of disputes Matthew sees when founders come to him after a business relationship has broken down.
Days 30–60: Contracts and IP
Once the structure is in place, the focus shifts to the agreements that govern every business relationship: vendor contracts, client agreements, employment or contractor documents, and NDAs. This is also the window to address intellectual property — trademarks, trade secrets, and any proprietary processes that give the business its competitive edge. Protecting those assets early costs a fraction of litigating over them later.
Days 60–90: Compliance and Ongoing Counsel
The final phase covers regulatory compliance specific to the business’s industry and location, ensuring licenses and permits are in order, and establishing a relationship with legal counsel that can scale with the business. The goal isn’t just to survive the first 90 days legally intact — it’s to build a legal infrastructure that supports growth rather than creating friction when opportunities arrive.
Read the full feature on EyesAI →
Perspective
The 90-day window EyesAI focuses on isn’t arbitrary — it’s when the decisions that are hardest to undo get made. Entity structure, founding agreements, and IP protection are far cheaper to get right at the start than to fix after a dispute forces the issue. This is exactly what Matthew Fornaro, P.A. exists to help new ventures do: build the legal foundation that makes everything else possible.
Launching a new venture in South Florida? Contact Matthew Fornaro, P.A. today to get your first 90 days right.



