I know someone in the financial services industry, and the severance agreements are An Issue.
Common gotchas:
- No contact: you brought clients with you on hire? They now "own" the; any contact, even if your FB friends, could be a violation of the "no contact/poaching" clause.
- Non-compete. If you have a specialization, does it preclude you from employment in that specialization?
- IP: Anything you knew or did might be construed as protected IP. The friend I mentioned got sued by his former brokerage, alleging that knowing about specific retirement planning strategies (think Roth conversions, SPIAs, tax optimization) was "using protected IP" since he'd done some training on those issues while at that firm. Crazy that general knowledge could be alleged as owned by a former employer.
- No comment clauses. You can't talk about how/why you left.
- Reputational clauses: you can't talk about the company or its leadership, to friends or on social media.
And I'm sure there are more. If it had anything to do with "clients as assets" or "no contact" with clients, I'd have my attorney review it.