1) Mistake: Not Verifying the Parties and Signatory Authority
What goes wrong:
If the contract uses the wrong legal name, tax/MERSIS data, or the signer lacks authority, you may face defenses like “wrong party,” “unauthorized signature,” or “not binding on the company.”
Protective clauses & steps:
- Use the company’s exact registered name and identification data.
- Add a statement that the signatory is duly authorized and attach/confirm signature circulars or power of attorney.
- Define official notice channels (address + email) and treat them as valid notification routes.
- Clarify which group entity is actually contracting and paying.
2) Mistake: Vague Scope of Work (Scope Creep)
What goes wrong:
Broad wording like “consulting services” or “software development” invites scope disputes, delivery fights, and payment resistance.
Protective clauses:
- Detailed scope and deliverables (technical specs, annexes, acceptance criteria).
- Change order clause: additional work requires written approval and pricing.
- Milestones, timelines, and a written acceptance protocol.
- Clear rule: work outside scope is separately priced and approved.
3) Mistake: Ignoring Currency and FX Risk
What goes wrong:
Turkey’s volatility makes currency ambiguity a dispute generator: TL vs USD/EUR, FX conversion date, tax inclusion, and payment mechanics.
Protective clauses:
- Price clearly in one currency and state whether VAT is included.
- If payment is in TL but indexed, define the FX source and date (e.g., central bank reference rate) and the calculation method.
- For long-term contracts, add indexation / price adjustment (CPI/PPI, FX basket, cost-plus logic).
- Define what happens if FX changes exceed a threshold (renegotiation/termination triggers).
4) Mistake: Weak Payment Terms and Default Consequences
What goes wrong:
“Net 30 days” is not enough. When does the period start—invoice date, delivery, or acceptance? What happens if the buyer pays late?
Protective clauses:
- Define payment trigger: invoice + delivery note, or acceptance certificate, etc.
- Default interest, collection costs, and allocation order (costs → interest → principal).
- Right to suspend performance or stop deliveries for non-payment.
- Partial payment and set-off rules (who can set-off and under what conditions).
5) Mistake: Not Defining Delivery, Risk Transfer, and Acceptance
What goes wrong:
Who arranges transport? When does risk pass? What documents prove delivery? What is “acceptance” for services and projects?
Protective clauses:
- Delivery place, delivery method, shipping responsibilities, and delivery evidence.
- Risk transfer point and insurance responsibility.
- Acceptance procedure: testing, acceptance period, “deemed acceptance” if no timely objection.
- Remedies for delay: liquidated damages or service credits (structured and capped).
6) Mistake: Unclear Quality, Defect, and Warranty Rules
What goes wrong:
Defect allegations often freeze payments. Without clear standards and inspection rules, disputes escalate fast.
Protective clauses:
- Technical specifications and applicable standards.
- Warranty scope and duration.
- Defect notice (how and within what timeframe defects must be reported).
- Remedy ladder: repair → replacement → price reduction/refund (tailored to business).
- Exclusions and limitations for indirect losses, downtime, or profit loss (where appropriate).
7) Mistake: Poorly Designed Penalty and Liquidated Damages Clauses
What goes wrong:
Penalties drafted to “scare” the other side can be vague, disproportionate, or hard to enforce. If the trigger is unclear, it becomes litigation fuel.
Protective clauses:
- Define the exact breach that triggers the penalty (delay, confidentiality breach, non-compete, etc.).
- Set a reasonable cap.
- Clarify relationship to damages (whether the penalty is exclusive or in addition to actual damages).
8) Mistake: No Practical Termination Framework
What goes wrong:
When the relationship breaks, the key question is “How do we exit?” If termination is unclear, the parties get stuck.
Protective clauses:
- Termination for cause (material breach, non-payment, repeated failure).
- Termination for convenience (notice period) if commercially needed.
- Post-termination consequences: unpaid amounts, return of materials, transition services, IP/license survival.
- Survival clause for confidentiality, dispute resolution, payment obligations, and liability limitations.
9) Mistake: Copy-Paste Force Majeure Clauses
What goes wrong:
Supply disruptions, earthquakes, regulatory bans, and logistics failures have increased force majeure fights. Generic wording often fails to match the business reality.
Protective clauses:
- Define force majeure events with examples relevant to your sector.
- Notice requirements, mitigation duty, and evidence expectations.
- Suspension/extension rules and long-stop termination rights.
- For import-dependent contracts: alternative sourcing and price adjustment logic.
10) Mistake: Weak Confidentiality, Data, and IP Provisions
What goes wrong:
In software, design, consulting, manufacturing, and know-how businesses, unclear ownership and confidentiality terms create major post-dispute damage.
Protective clauses:
- Clear definition of confidential information + exceptions.
- Duration of confidentiality obligations and consequences for breach.
- IP ownership in work product (assignment vs license; scope and territory).
- Subcontractor confidentiality obligations and flow-down clauses.
11) Mistake: No Liability Cap (Unlimited Exposure)
What goes wrong:
A single dispute can trigger claims far above contract value (especially with delay, lost profit, reputational loss allegations).
Protective clauses:
- Total liability cap (e.g., contract value or last 12 months’ fees).
- Exclude or limit indirect damages (loss of profit, business interruption), subject to negotiated carve-outs.
- Separate cap for confidentiality/data breaches (often higher) if needed.
12) Mistake: Ignoring Governing Law and Dispute Resolution Strategy
What goes wrong:
Foreign parties often treat dispute clauses as boilerplate. In Turkey, your choice affects speed, enforceability, and leverage.
Protective clauses:
- Choose governing law deliberately.
- Select dispute forum: Turkish courts vs arbitration (ICC/ISTAC/LCIA etc.).
- Define language, seat, number of arbitrators (if arbitration).
- Consider interim relief and evidence preservation.
A Fast “Protective Clause Pack” (A Business-Ready Checklist)
If you want a contract that survives stress in Turkey, ensure it includes:
- Party identity + signatory authority confirmation
- Scope + deliverables + acceptance + change orders
- Price + taxes + FX logic + adjustment mechanism
- Payment terms + default interest + suspension right
- Delivery/risk transfer + inspection and defect procedure
- Warranty and remedy ladder
- Penalties/liquidated damages with clear triggers and caps
- Termination + post-termination mechanics + survival
- Force majeure tailored to business model
- Confidentiality + IP + data protection obligations
- Liability limitations and carve-outs
- Governing law + dispute resolution + language
Conclusion
In Turkey, commercial contract disputes are rarely about one dramatic breach—they are usually about missing detail. The best protection is not aggressive wording; it is clarity: clear scope, clean payment triggers, realistic delivery and acceptance rules, disciplined defect procedures, and a dispute strategy that matches your enforcement plan. When protective clauses are designed around operational reality—especially currency volatility, documentation discipline, and termination mechanics—commercial contracts become a risk-control tool rather than a post-crisis argument.
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