A seminar provider can use this document when wanting to make a great and comprehensive agreement covering a live seminar.
When the provider of a live seminar (the "Seminar Provider") wants to lay down all the requirements for attendees and participants, he can use this Agreement for Offering Live Seminars. The document is not negotiable - that means that only the Seminar Provider sets the rules and requirements put in the material.
The Services Provider can write down all the details of the actual seminar as well as additional contractual terms to govern parties' relationship. Only two parties participate in the document: the seminar provider and the attendee/participant.
This document also contains standard contractual provisions: like a limitation on liability and intellectual property protection for the seminar provider, as well as some rules for the attendee/participant.
This document differs from a Speaking Engagement Agreement (ideti linka), as in the following document, only details of hiring for one speech are discussed. In the meantime, this document covers the whole seminar.
You fill out a form. The document is created before your eyes as you respond to the questions.
At the end, you receive it in Word and PDF formats. You can modify it and reuse it.
A seminar provider can use this document when wanting to make a great and comprehensive agreement covering a live seminar.
The document is easy to fill, as it only requires general seminar details and additional information about the specific terms applicable to attendance at the seminar. Note that the document also contains conditions necessary to protect the seminar provider and accurately govern the arrangement between the seminar provider and the seminar's attendee/participant.
A completed document should be posted online for the participants/attendees to read.
No set of laws outlines what must be put in an Agreement for Offering Live Seminars. However, state laws cover these agreements, as well as federal laws, which govern online disclosures, disclaimers, and advertising.