Megan Jerabek is a Shareholder, the Co-Chair of the Trusts and Estates Section, Chair of the Sports Law Section and a member of the firm’s Business, Tax and Real Estate Sections. Her practice focuses on estate planning, trust and estate administration, business succession planning, real estate leasing and business transactions. She also represents current and former professional athletes on a variety of matters, including real estate, business formation and transactions, and estate planning.
Megan is committed to serving as a trusted advisor to her clients and believes in a collaborative approach to individual and business planning, often times working directly with a client’s accountant, wealth advisor, and insurance representative to ensure that the client’s goals are being achieved as efficiently and effectively as possible.
Her estate planning work is statewide and ranges from initial planning for young professionals or others just starting the estate planning process to advanced planning for high net worth clients and families. Megan also assists business owners in creating new companies and planning how best to transition their established companies to the next generation of ownership, reviews, drafts and negotiates real estate leases and other business and real estate transactions, advises clients on business and tax planning, and assists trustees and personal representatives with post-death trust and estate administration. Regardless of who she is working with, Megan remains committed to clear communication and education to ensure her clients know what they are signing and why.
Megan frequently presents throughout Wisconsin on estate and business succession planning to professional trade associations, wealth advisors and insurance representatives, planned giving societies, and employees and executives as part of health and wellness programming offered by corporations. She has also been a frequent presenter at the State Bar of Wisconsin Annual Estate Planning Update.
During law school, Megan interned in the legal department at Nike in Portland, Oregon. While there, she worked with the company’s sports marketing division on coach and athlete endorsement contracts, special events, and licensing.
Megan is a proud University of Wisconsin alumna and loves living and working in the Madison community. She is an avid Badgers fan and currently serves on the UW Athletic Department’s Equity Diversity Council. She is also very active with Downtown Madison, Inc. (“DMI”), currently serving as co-Chair of the Board of Directors and a member of the Executive Committee. She also serves on DMI’s Inclusiveness Committee and previously served as the Chairperson of the Membership and Marketing Committee. She is a member of the Anderson Legacy Society for the Overture Center, where she educates donors on the importance of planned giving. Megan is also a member of HOAN, an organization that brings together leaders from Madison and Milwaukee to help further collaboration between the two communities.
More Legal and Business Bylines From Megan L.W. Jerabek
- It's Time to Play "Let's Make A Deal" – Drafting Effective Letters of Intent - (Posted On Saturday, December 17, 2016)
- 5 P's for Picking Right Retail Real Estate Attorney - (Posted On Monday, May 02, 2016)
- What's In A Name? Understanding Implications of How You Hold Title to Your Assets - (Posted On Tuesday, March 08, 2016)
- Annual ICSC Law Conference Update: Another Year, Another Round of Great Topics and Speakers - (Posted On Monday, December 07, 2015)
- Days of Tax-Free Internet Sales May Soon Be Over With Introduction of Remote Transactions Parity Act - (Posted On Tuesday, September 08, 2015)
- Estate Planning Update--February 2015 - (Posted On Monday, February 09, 2015)
- Chicken Restaurant Case Serves Up A Bucket of Sound Contract Principles for Commercial Leases - (Posted On Thursday, July 10, 2014)
- Wisconsin's Landlord/Tenant Laws Receive (Yet Another) Update - (Posted On Wednesday, April 16, 2014)
- Estate Planning Lessons Learned from Downton Abbey - (Posted On Wednesday, January 29, 2014)
- Current Estate Tax Laws May Make Previously Drafted Estate Plans Inefficient - (Posted On Tuesday, January 28, 2014)