Klaudija Kaubryte - Legal & Risk Strategist

Klaudija Kaubryte - Legal & Risk Strategist Supporting businesses with trademarks, contract risk review and AI regulation. Making complex law practical. Strategic legal clarity.

EU & Sweden | EN / SE / LT / RU

30/05/2026

Left a corporate "stable" job because the standard was "good enough ".
I am not built for that.
Independent legal practice. Commercial contracts, IP, EU law.

30/05/2026

My client successfully runs four business. He thought he'd thought of everything. Well- he hadn't.
Let me show you how a legal and risk strategist thinks - link below 👇
https://klaudijakaubryte.com/risk-insights

We didn't win. They still said this. ✨Shared with permission. Name kept private.
29/05/2026

We didn't win. They still said this. ✨

Shared with permission. Name kept private.

Sometimes the win isn't in the outcome.A client recently shared this after we closed their case — a case we didn't win:"...
29/05/2026

Sometimes the win isn't in the outcome.

A client recently shared this after we closed their case — a case we didn't win:

"She was calm itself when I first reached out and I was incredibly stressed. Her thorough working style and the fact that she collaborated with her colleagues to carry out a well-executed review impressed me. She kept constant contact and carried out everything according to the plan. A thousand thanks — hold on to her!"

This is what I work for.

Not every legal matter ends in your favour. But every client deserves clarity, a real process, and someone who stays steady when they're not.

If you're navigating a complex legal situation and need someone who'll be thorough, communicative, and honest with you — let's talk.

Shared with permission. Name withheld to protect client confidentiality.

27/05/2026
27/05/2026

Lithuania. Iceland. Sweden. Sicily.
Now I help founders, brands and creators protect what they build- before legal risk becomes expensive.

25/05/2026

People often think legal disputes are simple:

“If I’m right, I’ll win.”

Reality is more brutal than that.

You can be completely right legally — and still lose enormous amounts of money, time, energy, sleep, focus, and peace.

Before starting a dispute, you need to think strategically:

– What will the legal process cost?
– How long will it take?
– Will the other side even be able to pay if you win?
– Do you have legal insurance, union support, or affordable legal help?
– Is court actually the smartest option?
– Are there authorities or alternative paths that make more sense?

A court decision on paper does not automatically mean money in your bank account.

This is why legal strategy matters just as much as legal rights.

25/05/2026

This is why I keep saying: do not sign what you don’t understand.

I had a consultation with a client who signed a financing agreement in a hurry.

The deal sounded good.
The company was pushing for a fast decision.
He did not read the whole contract.
He did not ask anyone to review it.
He signed.

And now he knows that was a mistake.

The agreement involved a car used as collateral. Later, the situation escalated: unclear explanations, “internal rules”, external website terms, registration documents being requested, and one explanation by phone that did not fully match what came later in writing.

But the first risk happened much earlier.

It happened at the moment of signing.

When you are pressured to decide quickly, pause.
When the deal sounds “too good to miss”, pause.
When you do not fully understand the contract, pause.

Ask for time.
Ask for the terms in writing.
Ask someone to review it.

Because once the conflict starts, the question is not what you hoped the contract meant.

The question is what you actually signed.

A good deal is not good if you don’t understand the risk.

Details changed and anonymised.

24/05/2026

Not every “professional” contract clause is good for every business.

I often see dispute resolution clauses where small businesses, freelancers, consultants, or creators are pushed into private arbitration.

Arbitration exists for good reasons: confidentiality, specialist decision-makers, international business disputes, and avoiding public court. For larger companies, that can make sense.

But for a small business, the same clause can become a serious problem.

Why?

Because before you even get to the actual dispute, arbitration may involve registration fees, administrative fees, arbitrator costs, and legal costs. For example, SCC lists registration fees of EUR 3,000 excl. VAT under ordinary arbitration rules and EUR 2,500 excl. VAT under expedited arbitration rules. In comparison, Swedish small claims court procedure lists an application fee of SEK 900. 

So the real question is not:

“Is arbitration good or bad?”

The real question is:

Does this dispute resolution clause fit your size, risk, budget, and bargaining power?

Because a clause that gives a large company control and privacy may give a freelancer only one thing:

a dispute they cannot afford to pursue.

Before signing, check where disputes must be handled, what it costs, whether court is excluded, and whether the clause actually protects you — or only the stronger party.

Good contracts are not just about sounding serious.
They are about being usable when something goes wrong.

24/05/2026

That's why I do what I do today ✨

Adress

Stockholm

Webbplats

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