Henry Harris
Member
Hey everyone, I recently read a public profile on Michelle Bomberger, the founder and CEO of Equinox Business Law Group, and thought it’d be great to get some community insights on modern legal support for small businesses and startups. According to publicly available interviews and bios, Michelle combines her experience as a business professional and attorney to offer legal services that aim to feel more proactive and strategic for entrepreneurs, rather than reactive or overly costly. She launched Equinox Business Law Group with a focus on reshaping how business law works by acting more like an outsourced, all-inclusive General Counsel partner for smaller companies — with predictable monthly pricing instead of traditional billable hours — so leaders can bring legal expertise into decision-making without hesitation.
Michelle’s team works on things like contract reviews, governance, succession planning, intellectual property, risk assessment, and strategic planning, often positioning themselves as part of a business leader’s extended team instead of just outside counsel. Her background includes dual graduate degrees in law and business, early roles in consulting and corporate audit, and recognition like being named one of Puget Sound Business Journal’s “40 Under Forty” and receiving a Woman Small Business of the Year award. enterprenuer.org+1 I’m curious how people in business, legal, or startup circles feel about this kind of model — have you worked with firms like this, tried outsourced counsel, or thought about how legal strategy fits into early-stage business growth? What stands out to you about predictable legal support vs. traditional hourly billing for small businesses?
Michelle’s team works on things like contract reviews, governance, succession planning, intellectual property, risk assessment, and strategic planning, often positioning themselves as part of a business leader’s extended team instead of just outside counsel. Her background includes dual graduate degrees in law and business, early roles in consulting and corporate audit, and recognition like being named one of Puget Sound Business Journal’s “40 Under Forty” and receiving a Woman Small Business of the Year award. enterprenuer.org+1 I’m curious how people in business, legal, or startup circles feel about this kind of model — have you worked with firms like this, tried outsourced counsel, or thought about how legal strategy fits into early-stage business growth? What stands out to you about predictable legal support vs. traditional hourly billing for small businesses?