OPINION
This is an accelerated, interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s order granting appellee Tony Rawlinson’s special appearance. In two issues, the appellants Information Services Group, Inc., Technology Partners International, Inc., and TPI Eu- *396 resourcing, L.L.C. contend that the trial court erred in granting the special appearance. Because we hold that Rawlinson lacks sufficient minimum contacts to support the assertion of specific jurisdiction, we affirm.
I
Rawlinson is a former employee of TPI Eurosourcing, L.L.C. (“Eurosourcing”). Rawlinson worked for Eurosourcing from June 2004 until May 2008. Eurosourcing is a Texas limited liability company with operations in the United Kingdom. Raw-linson, a citizen and resident of the U.K., worked for Eurosourcing in the U.K. exclusively. Eurosourcing is a branch or subsidiary of Technology Partners International, Inc. (“Technology Partners”), a Texas corporation that has its principal place of business in The Woodlands, Texas. In 2007, Information Services Group, Inc. (“Information Services”), through a purchase agreement with MCP-TPI Holdings, LLC (“MCP-TPI”), 1 another Texas company, acquired ownership of Information Services and Eurosourcing. Information Services is a Delaware company that has its principal place of business in Connecticut.
In the course of Rawlinson’s employment relationship, he entered into employment agreements with Eurosourcing and a confidentiality agreement with Eurosoure-ing and Technology Partners. He also acquired an ownership interest in MCP-TPI, and executed a non-competition, non-solicitation, and non-disclosure agreement with MCP-TPI. In connection with Information Services’s acquisition of Technology Partners and Eurosourcing, Rawlinson executed a subscription agreement in which he agreed to invest part of the sales proceeds he received from his equity interest in MCP-TPI, and he also executed non-competition, non-solicitation, and nondisclosure agreements with Information Services. Rawlinson also was issued a Eurosourcing computer to access appellants’ website and his email account, and he traveled to Texas twice at Eurosourc-ing’s direction for annual conferences.
The address of the Eurosourcing office through which Rawlinson worked is Albany House, Market Street, Maidenhead, Berkshire SL6 8BE, U.K. Rawlinson’s employment agreements specified that his primary place of employment was his home in the U.K. and that the agreements were subject to the laws of England and Wales. The confidentiality agreement among Eurosourcing, Technology Partners, and Rawlinson also provided that it was governed by English law and further provided that the parties agreed to submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts. Rawlinson’s agreements with Information Services included choice-of-law provisions specifying that either New York or Delaware law applied. Rawlinson executed his employment agreements and all of the other agreements in the U.K. Raw-linson’s communications with Eurosourc-ing, Technology Partners, or Information Services representatives outside of the U.K. were infrequent and he did not initiate them. Rawlinson was never an employee of Technology Partners or Information Services.
Less than two months after his departure from Eurosourcing, Rawlinson went to work for EquaTerra Europe, Limited, in the U.K. EquaTerra Europe is a subsidiary of EquaTerra, Inc., a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Texas. The appellants and EquaTerra, Inc. are competitors in the business of providing various consulting services to companies throughout the United States and Europe. Under the restrictive cove *397 nants in his agreements with the appellants, Rawlinson was prohibited from working for a competitor for at least six months after his departure. According to the appellants, after he resigned, Rawlin-son also took confidential and proprietary information with him to his new employer in violation of his confidentiality agreements.
In July 2008, the appellants sued Raw-linson and EquaTerra, Inc. in Harris County. 2 The appellants alleged that Rawlinson breached three non-disclosure, non-solicitation, and non-competition agreements. The appellants also alleged that EquaTerra violated two letter agreements containing non-solicitation provisions, and additionally asserted claims of tortious interference, unfair competition, and unjust enrichment against EquaTerra. In response, Rawlinson filed a special appearance. He later amended his special appearance and filed it with a supporting affidavit. The appellants specially excepted to these filings and sought a continuance to take Rawlinson’s deposition. Rawlinson then filed an amended special appearance and an amended affidavit After the appellants deposed Rawlinson in Houston, they responded to his special appearance. Following a non-evidentiary hearing, the trial court signed an order on February 24, 2009, granting Rawlinson’s special appearance and dismissing him from the case.
II
A
Whether a trial court has personal jurisdiction over a defendant is a question of law we review de novo.
Moki Mac River Expeditions v. Drugg,
B
The plaintiff has the initial burden of pleading sufficient allegations to bring the nonresident defendant within the provisions of the Texas long-arm statute.
BMC Software,
C
Texas courts may exercise jurisdiction over a nonresident if the Texas long-arm statute authorizes the exercise of personal jurisdiction and the exercise of jurisdiction is consistent with federal and
*398
state constitutional guarantees of due process. Mo
ki Mac,
Personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant is constitutional when two conditions are met: (1) the defendant has established minimum contacts with the forum state; and (2) the exercise of jurisdiction comports with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington,
D
Texas courts may exercise two types of jurisdiction based on a nonresident’s contacts with the state. If the defendant has made continuous and systematic contacts with the forum, general jurisdiction is established whether or not the defendant’s alleged liability arises from those contacts.
Moki Mac,
*399 III
On appeal, the appellants contend that Rawlinson engaged in acts constituting “doing business” in Texas as provided in the Texas long-arm statute because they alleged that Rawlinson entered into contracts with Texas residents and engaged in other purposeful contacts constituting “doing business” in Texas. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 17.042. The appellants also contend that they demonstrated that Rawlinson has constitutionally sufficient minimum contacts to support specific jurisdiction and that the assumption of jurisdiction would not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
In their original petition, the appellants alleged that Rawlinson was amenable to service of process pursuant to the Texas long-arm statute because he “entered i.’to several contracts with Texas residents that called for performance in part in Texas, including, but not limited to, a contract of employment with [Eurosourc-ing], a Texas company....” The appellants further alleged that Rawlinson executed a confidentiality agreement with Technology Partners and Eurosourcing, that he agreed not to engage in any competition or perform any services for a competitor, and that his employment with EquaTerra breached three of his agreements with the appellants. Additionally, the appellants alleged that Rawlinson solicited business from the appellants’ clients, solicited the appellants’ employees to leave their employment, and took the appellants’ confidential information and gave it to EquaTerra.
4
Because the exercise of jurisdiction under the Texas long-arm statute is limited by federal and state due-process requirements, we need only consider whether the assertion of jurisdiction accords with the due-process guarantees.
See Moki Mac,
The appellants primarily contend that Rawlinson’s various agreements with Texas entities establish minimum contacts. Specifically, the appellants point to Raw-linson’s execution of employment agreements with Eurosourcing, a Texas limited-liability company, which incorporated the restrictive covenants in a contemporaneously executed confidentiality agreement with both Eurosourcing and Technology Partners, also a Texas company. Additionally, the appellants allege that Rawlin-son entered into two more contracts with MCP-TPI, another Texas limited-liability company “by which he was also employed and in which he owned an equity interest.” One of these agreements included restrictive covenants and was governed by Texas law. Further, the appellants contend, the restrictive covenants protected, among other things, the confidential information stored on Texas-based servers that Raw- *400 linson regularly accessed in the daily performance of his job using a computer Eu-rosourcing issued to him. Rawlinson’s electronic mail was also routed through these same servers. Additionally, Rawlin-son also made two trips to Texas as required for his job.
These contacts, the appellants contend, show that Rawlinson purposefully availed himself of the privilege of conducting activities within Texas, thereby invoking the benefits and protection of its laws.
See Burger King v. Rudzewicz,
Further, viewed in the context of the appellants’ allegations, the Texas contacts the appellants rely on appear more attenuated than purposeful. In their petition, the appellants alleged that Rawlinson breached three agreements: (1) the Confidentiality and Proprietary Information Agreement executed on June 7, 2004 (among Technology Partners, Eurosourc-ing, and Rawlinson); (2) the Non-Competition, Non-Solicitation, Non-Disclosure and Lock-Up Agreement executed on May 30, 2007 (between Information Services and Rawlinson); and (3) the Restricted Stock Unit Award Agreement and Restrictive Covenant Agreement executed on November 16, 2007 (between Information Services and Rawlinson). The first of these, the Confidentiality and Proprietary Information Agreement, identified Euro-sourcing as “a branch [of Technology Partners] registered in England and Wales” and reflected Eurosourcing’s and Rawlin-son’s U.K. addresses. This agreement also specified that it was governed by English law and the parties agreed to submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts. Moreover, it was ancillary to Raw-linson’s employment agreements, which similarly specified that they were governed by the laws of England and Wales. The more recent of the two employment agreements further provided that the parties agreed to submit to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts. Additionally, although Rawlinson’s employment agreements provided that Eurosoureing could require Rawlinson to work or travel outside of the U.K., it designated Rawlin-son’s “Place of Work” as “your home address in England” and never mentioned Texas as a potential place for performance. The other two agreements allegedly breached were with Information Services, a Delaware corporation, were governed by either New York or Delaware law, and neither of these agreements contemplated performance in Texas.
As noted in
Michiana Easy Livin’ Country, Inc. v. Holten,
the United States Supreme Court has held that choice-of-law provisions should be considered when determining whether a defen
*401
dant has purposely availed itself of the benefits and protections of a state’s laws.
The appellants also point out that Rawlinson entered into two agreements with MCP-TPI, a Texas company, and those agreements include a Texas choice-of-law provision. The appellants also focus on Rawlinson’s equity interest in MCP-TPI, stressing that an ownership interest in a Texas company is a much more significant contact than mere employment by a Texas company. But MCP-TPI is not a party to the lawsuit, and the appellants have not asserted in their petition that any alleged breach of the agreements with MCP-TPI constitutes a basis for relief in them lawsuit. Accordingly, these contacts are not relevant to the minimum-contacts analysis for specific jurisdiction.
See Yfantis v. Balloun,
115 S.W.Sd 175, 183 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 2003, no pet.);
Shell Companía Argentina de Petroleo, S.A.,
In addition to contracting with Texas companies, the appellants point to several contacts Rawlinson had with Texas during his employment with Eurosourcing. But these contacts were made at Euro-sourcing’s direction or were otherwise attenuated or fortuitous. First, appellants point out that Rawlinson was required to travel to Texas to participate in company
conferences. Rawlinson traveled to Texas two times, totaling six days, and these two trips were the only times Rawlinson ever traveled to Texas. The appellants presented some evidence that Rawlinson received confidential and proprietary information at the conferences, but they do not allege that Rawlinson’s trips to Texas relate in any way to the breach-of-contract claims against him. Further, Rawlinson did not elect to visit Texas; it is undisputed that he attended the conferences at Eurosourcing’s direction. Such unilateral activity is insufficient to constitute relevant jurisdictional contacts.
See Gonzalez v. AAG Las Vegas, L.L.C.,
— S.W.3d at —;
Pelican State Physical Therapy, L.P. v. Bratton,
No. 01-06-00199-CV,
The appellants also presented evidence that Rawlinson accessed confidential and proprietary information — via the company website and email — from company servers that happened to be located in Texas. To support their contention that these contacts are relevant to the minimum-contacts analysis, the appellant's cite to
TravelJungle v. American Airlines, Inc.,
In contrast, the appellants here do not allege that Rawlinson acted improperly or unlawfully when accessing the servers from the U.K., nor does Rawlinson’s access to them form the basis for any of the appellant’s claims against him. Further, the appellants unilaterally chose the Texas location for the servers, and it is undisputed that Rawlinson did not know where the servers were located. Therefore, Rawlin-son could not have purposefully availed himself of the benefits of conducting business in Texas by accessing the servers from the U.K.
5
In the absence of any allegation that Rawlinson purposefully directed any improper activity towards their servers, Rawlinson’s business-related use of appellants’ website and email that happened to be routed through servers the appellants chose to locate in Texas is merely fortuitous. Even if we assume that Rawlinson ultimately obtained confidential information from the Texas-based servers and gave it to EquaTerra in breach of the various restrictive covenants with the appellants, there is no allegation or evidence that he did so in Texas.
See Gustafson,
Appellants also argue that Rawlin-son’s employment-related contacts created “continuing relationships and obligations” with Texas entities subjecting him to jurisdiction in Texas to face the consequences of his activities.
See Burger King,
Burger King instructs that we must look not merely to a party’s contract
*403
with the nonresident; we must also examine the factors surrounding the contract— prior negotiations and contemplated future consequences, the terms of the contract, and the parties’ actual course of dealing— to determine whether the nonresident purposefully established minimum contacts within the forum.
Similarly, in
Lathrop v. Personalysis Corp.,
Lathrop, a Washington resident, was hired by Manatech, a Washington corporation with its principal place of business in Washington.
We conclude that the facts of the present case are substantially different from those in
Burger King
and
Lathrop.
Here, Rawlinson was a U.K. employee of Euro-sourcing, a European branch of Technology Partners, and he was not a franchisee or licensee of Technology Partners. The record evidence shows that, other than two required trips to Texas for company conferences and infrequent communications initiated from Texas, Rawlinson’s employment activities occurred exclusively in the U.K. Further, Rawlinson did not “reach out” to Texas by seeking employment in Texas; he averred that he did not solicit employment or business in Texas and there is no contrary evidence. And, as noted above, Rawlinson’s confidentiality agreement with Eurosourcing and Technology Partners, which is one of the agreements the appellants allege Rawlinson breached, provided that it was governed by English law and the parties were subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts. More importantly, there is no evidence that Rawlinson’s employment with Eurosourcing in the U.K. contemplated a relationship with Technology Partners in Texas akin to the continued direct oversight and compliance that Burger King and Personalysis required of their franchisees and licensees. Examining the factors surrounding Rawlinson’s contracts with Eurosourcing and Technology Partners, including prior negotiations and contemplated future consequences, along with the terms of the contract and the parties’ actual course of dealing,
see Burger King,
Moreover, as our supreme court explained in
Moki Mac,
there must be a substantial connection between the alleged contacts and the operative facts of the litigation.
Moki Mac,
The appellants assert that minimum contacts are established by Rawlinson’s contracts with and employment by Texas companies, his two trips to Texas for company conferences, his access to the appellants’ servers in Texas through his use of the appellants’ website and his email account, and his occasional communications with the appellants’ representatives outside of the U.K. But these contacts are not substantially connected to the operative facts of a trial based on the appellants’ allegations. Although Rawlinson may
*405
have received confidential and proprietary information at the Texas conferences or obtained it by remotely accessing the appellants’ Texas servers, the appellants do not identify the confidential information Rawlinson allegedly provided to EquaTer-ra (or its affiliates) and they do not allege that Rawlinson gave confidential information to EquaTerra in Texas. Even assuming that Rawlinson’s employment-related contacts were sufficient to demonstrate purposeful availment, they do not create a substantial connection to the operative facts of the litigation.
See Moki Mac,
Other courts have reached the same conclusion in analogous cases. For example, in Gonzalez v. AAG Las Vegas, L.L.C., Gonzalez was employed in Ohio at an automotive dealership when an officer of Ascent Automotive Group, L.P., a Delaware partnership located in Houston, approached him about a management position with an Ohio Lexus dealership. — S.W.3d at -. Gonzalez traveled to Houston to interview for the position, and while there he was asked to invest in two Ohio dealerships and allegedly was offered the right to earn an ownership interest in the dealerships. Id. Gonzalez became the general manager of one of the dealerships, and as such he reported to Texas, received his pay from Texas, and regularly telephoned Houston to report on the status of the dealership. Id. AAG Las Vegas then hired Gonzalez to be the general manager of a Las Vegas Lexus dealership, and Gonzalez moved from Ohio to Las Vegas for the job. While there, he traveled to Houston to attend a general manager’s meeting. Id. After about a year, AAG Las Vegas terminated Gonzalez and sued him for breach of the duty of loyalty, usurpation of corporate opportunities, and a declaratory judgment that he was not entitled to an ownership interest in the Ohio and Las Vegas dealerships. Id. at-,-. The trial court denied Gonzalez’s special appearance, but the court of appeals held that the employment-related contacts the appellants asserted lacked a sufficient connection to the litigation’s operative facts. Id. at -. Based on the appellants’ pleadings, the court determined that the operative facts of their claims concerned Gonzalez’s acts while general manager in Las Vegas, and that Gonzalez’s employment-related contacts with Texas were “minimal.” Id. at-. Accordingly, the court held that Gonzalez lacked sufficient minimum contacts to support the assertion of specific jurisdiction in Texas. Id. at-.
Likewise, in
Rushmore Investment Ad-visors, Inc. v. Frey,
the Pennsylvania employee of a Texas company was sued in Texas for breach of an employment contract, misappropriation of trade secrets, and unfair competition.
In
Pelican State Physical Therapy, L.P. v. Bratton,
the court of appeals affirmed the grant of a special appearance even though the Louisiana-based defendant entered into employment contracts with his Texas employer that contained, among other provisions, non-compete, non-solicitation, and non-disclosure covenants; the employee had taken many trips to Texas to attend company meetings; and he had extensive communications with the employer’s personnel in Texas.
See
In another analogous case,
Gustafson v. Provider HealthNet Services, Inc.,
the court of appeals rejected a Texas employer’s assertion that specific jurisdiction existed over its former Michigan employee because the employment relationship created “continuing obligations” with Texas.
See
The Gustafson court determined that, based on the claims alleged, these contacts were not sufficient to establish specific jurisdiction because the contacts were not “connected to Gustafson’s execution of the confidentiality agreement, or his dissemination of confidential information, both of which occurred in Michigan.” Id. at 484. The court went on to reject PHNS’s assertion that “continuing obligations” arising *407 from the employment relationship established jurisdiction. Id. The court expressly distinguished Burger King, noting that in Burger King the contract between the franchisor and franchisee required performance in the forum state and the agreement expressly provided that it was governed by the forum state’s law. Id. In contrast, Gustafson had not signed an employment agreement, but he did sign a confidentiality agreement that was executed in Michigan, made no reference to Texas, and did not require any performance in Texas. Id. Lastly, the court recognized that a breach of the confidentiality agreement “could cause an injury in Texas,” but concluded that “the mere fact that an injury is caused in the forum state is insufficient to establish minimum contacts.” Id.
In an effort to identify contacts substantially connected to the litigation’s operative facts, the appellants contend that Rawlinson failed to negate all bases of jurisdiction alleged against him because he has provided no evidence to show that the various agreements and restrictive covenants did not require performance in Texas. By this argument, the appellants appear to suggest that Texas has personal jurisdiction over Rawlinson because he was contractually prohibited from competing against Technology Partners in Texas — and apparently anywhere else in the world. Consequently, the appellants argue, the covenants require performance in Texas and so personal jurisdiction is proper here. The appellants also stress that Rawlinson has admitted that he breached the non-compete agreements, but we do not consider the merits of appellants’ claims when conducting a personal-jurisdiction analysis.
See Weldon-Francke v. Fisher,
We disagree that a nonresident may be automatically subject to personal jurisdiction in any forum in which he is prohibited from engaging in business based on a non-compete agreement, without regard to whether he actually engaged in competitive activities in the forum or otherwise lacked minimum contacts. Further, we conclude that an agreement not to compete in a forum is more properly viewed as an agreement to refrain from performance in the forum rather than a contact with the forum. As one court explained:
“If the question is whether an individual’s contract with an out of state party alone can automatically establish sufficient minimum contacts in the other party’s home forum, we believe the answer is clearly that it cannot.” This holding must apply with particular force where the contract is one to refrain from doing an act in Texas.
Dowdy v. Miller,
*408 Based on the foregoing, we hold that the trial court did not err in granting Rawlin-son’s special appearance and dismissing him from the case because Rawlinson lacks the minimum contacts required for the trial court to exercise personal jurisdiction over him. Therefore, we do not consider whether the exercise of personal jurisdiction over him comports with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. * * *
We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. Although it is a defendant below, EquaTer-ra, Inc. is not a parly to this appeal. Equa-Terra Europe is not a party to this lawsuit.
. Here, the trial court held a hearing on Raw-linson’s special appearance, but we have no reporter’s record of the hearing. Because neither party contends the hearing was evi-dentiary and the record does not indicate otherwise, we will presume that the hearing was non-evidentiary and that the trial court considered only the evidence filed with the clerk.
See Michiana Easy Livin’ Country, Inc. v. Holten,
. As an initial matter, Rawlinson contends that the appellants failed to plead adequate jurisdictional facts to shift the burden to him to negate every pleaded basis for jurisdiction over him. We disagree. As discussed above, the appellants alleged that Rawlinson entered into contracts with Texas companies calling for performance in part in Texas, and that he breached his agreements with the appellants. The appellants also alleged that Rawlinson "has engaged in significant activities in or related to Texas, [and] has conducted business and negotiated in Texas with Texas residents.” Liberally construing the pleadings, we conclude that the appellants' jurisdictional allegations were sufficient to shift the burden to Rawlinson to negate the jurisdictional allegations.
See
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 17.042 (acts that may constitute “doing business” include "contractfing] by mail or otherwise with a Texas resident and either party is to perform the contract in whole or in part in this state”);
Huynh v. Nguyen,
. TravelJungle also contended that it could not be subject to personal jurisdiction because it did not know where American’s servers were located, but the court rejected Travel-Jungle's contention, concluding that Travel-Jungle purposefully directed its activities to American's website and
so
“should have been aware” that it would be subject to jurisdiction in any forum where the website’s servers were located.
See TravelJungle,
