Startups & Korea–Canada Collaboration
Whether you are forming your first company, protecting an invention, or exploring a partnership across the Pacific,
Harmony Law can help you move forward with confidence.
Whether you are forming your first company, protecting an invention, or exploring a partnership across the Pacific,
Harmony Law can help you move forward with confidence.
Harmony Law helps technology companies protect what they build and grow across borders. With a founder who worked as a scientist and researcher in Korean and multinational industry before practising intellectual property law, the firm brings a combination rarely found in one place: scientific understanding, IP and corporate legal expertise, and genuine bilingual, bicultural fluency between Canada and South Korea.
We work with founders, startups, and established technology companies — particularly those moving between the Canadian and Korean markets, where legal systems, language, and business culture all differ.
Building a company is hard enough without untangling legal complexity along the way. Harmony Law supports startups from formation through growth, with practical advice that fits an early-stage budget and timeline.
Our work for founders includes:
Harmony Law has a particular focus on the corridor between Canada and South Korea — helping Korean companies establish and commercialize in Canada, and supporting Canadian ventures as they pursue Korean partners and markets.
International collaborations rarely fail because of the technology. More often, they falter at the legal and commercial layer: who owns jointly developed intellectual property, how technology is licensed across borders, and how partnership and investment agreements hold up across two distinct legal systems and languages. This is where the firm adds value — treating IP not as a defensive filing exercise, but as a commercial asset structured for joint development and market entry.
We assist with:
Market entry — establishing Korean companies in Canada
Cross-border IP strategy — ownership, licensing, and technology-transfer terms in international R&D collaborations and businesses
Partnership and joint-development agreements — structured to allocate rights and responsibilities clearly between partners.
Bilingual counsel — advice and documents delivered in English and Korean.
The firm advises companies across emerging technology fields, with particular experience in artificial intelligence, robotics, and autonomous systems — the areas now broadly described as physical AI, where software meets physical hardware.
Beyond client work, Harmony Law’s founder, Kwang Hoon Shin, is active in the Canada–Korea innovation community:
These roles keep the firm connected to researchers, entrepreneurs, and institutions on both sides of the corridor — and informed about where Canadian and Korean innovation priorities are heading.