Confidentiality Agreement (NDA)
Drafts corporate NDAs and confidentiality agreements for M&A, due diligence, partnerships, JVs, and licensing negotiations. Handles mutual vs. unilateral structuring, CI definitions and exclusions, compelled-disclosure procedures, standstill and non-solicit provisions, return/destroy obligations, and equitable relief. Use when initiating any pre-deal evaluation or sensitive business discussion requiring enforceable confidentiality protections.
Confidentiality Agreement (NDA)
Drafts enforceable corporate NDAs calibrated for mutual or unilateral disclosure in M&A, partnerships, or due diligence contexts.
Prerequisites
Gather before drafting:
- Parties — exact legal names, entity types, states of formation, principal addresses
- Structure — mutual (bidirectional) or unilateral (one-way)
- Transaction purpose — asset purchase, stock purchase, merger, JV, licensing, partnership exploration
- Parameters — CI protection period, standstill period, non-solicit period, governing law/venue
- Public company flag — if either party is publicly traded (triggers Reg FD / MNPI considerations)
Quick Start
- Identify mutual vs. unilateral structure
- Draft header with party details and effective date
- Define CI scope and standard exclusions
- Set core obligations (use restriction, care standard, non-disclosure)
- Add protective provisions as needed (standstill, non-solicit)
- Include term, return/destroy, remedies, and general provisions
- Validate against the pitfalls checklist below
Core Drafting Workflow
1. Header and Purpose
- Title reflects directionality ("Mutual Confidentiality Agreement" or "Non-Disclosure Agreement")
- Effective date, full party identification (legal name, entity type, formation state, address)
- Purpose statement describing the specific transaction being evaluated
- Include: no obligation to proceed; no binding commitment absent separate definitive agreement
2. Confidential Information Definition
Covered categories: financial data, strategic plans, technical IP, personnel information, customer/supplier lists, oral disclosures, and the fact/existence of discussions themselves.
Standard exclusions (with evidence requirements):
| Exclusion | Evidence |
|---|---|
| Public domain at disclosure | None |
| Becomes public without breach | None |
| Already possessed pre-disclosure | Pre-existing written records |
| Independently developed | Contemporaneous written records |
| Received from unrestricted third party | Written documentation |
3. Core Obligations
- Use restriction — CI solely for evaluating the stated transaction; no competitive use, product development, or solicitation
- Care standard — same degree as receiving party's own CI, no less than reasonable care; specify "highest degree" for highly sensitive categories
- Non-disclosure — no third-party disclosure without written consent, except to permitted Representatives
4. Permitted Disclosures
Define "Representatives" narrowly: need-to-know employees/officers/directors + transaction-specific external advisors.
Before disclosing to any Representative:
- [ ] Need-to-know confirmed for the specific CI
- [ ] Informed of confidential nature and obligations
- [ ] Bound by equally restrictive confidentiality obligations
- [ ] Receiving party remains liable for Representative breaches
5. Compelled Disclosure
- Prompt written notice before disclosure (nature of requirement, CI at issue, circumstances)
- Cooperate in seeking protective order or limitation
- Disclose only the minimum legally required; seek confidential treatment
6. Optional Protective Provisions
Non-solicitation (when deal involves employee exposure):
| Element | Range |
|---|---|
| Covered employees | Those contacted or identified in CI |
| Duration | 1–3 years |
| Scope | Direct/indirect solicitation + hiring |
Standstill (for potential acquisitions, especially public companies):
| Element | Range |
|---|---|
| Duration | 6 months – 2 years |
| Exceptions | Board consent; response to disclosing party solicitation; competing bid |
Prohibited: acquiring securities/assets, proposing combinations, seeking board seats, forming groups, related public announcements.
7. Term, Return/Destroy, and Remedies
Protection periods:
| Category | Duration |
|---|---|
| General business CI | 2–3 years |
| Trade secrets | Indefinite (until public without breach) |
| Highly sensitive technical | 5 years or indefinite |
Return/destroy obligation: on written request or termination — return or destroy all CI materials (originals, copies, derivatives); electronic deletion with reasonable steps; officer-signed certification of compliance.
Remedies: equitable relief (injunction without bond or proof of actual damages), actual damages, specific performance, prevailing-party fees if included.
8. General Provisions
- [ ] Entire agreement superseding prior discussions
- [ ] Amendments only by signed written instrument
- [ ] No waiver by failure to enforce
- [ ] Severability with reformation
- [ ] No assignment without consent (consider M&A carve-out)
- [ ] Counterparts and electronic signatures
- [ ] IP disclaimer — no license granted; CI remains disclosing party's property
- [ ] Governing law, exclusive jurisdiction, jury trial waiver
- [ ] Signature blocks with authority confirmation
Pitfalls
- Mutual symmetry — if mutual, all obligations must run bidirectionally; do not patch with one-sided carve-outs
- Trade secret vs. general CI — fixed-term protection may limit trade secret rights under state UTSA; distinguish and protect trade secrets indefinitely [VERIFY by jurisdiction]
- Public companies — add Reg FD compliance and MNPI trading restriction language
- Standstill scope — narrower is more defensible; tailor to deal context and bargaining position
- No-obligation language — make conspicuous; absence invites implied good-faith-to-negotiate claims
- Cross-border — this template is US-baseline; address GDPR, export controls, and foreign judgment enforcement separately
- Electronic execution — confirm E-SIGN Act and state UETA compliance [VERIFY]
- Signatory authority — verify actual (not apparent) authority; request board resolutions for significant transactions
Key changes from the original:
- Frontmatter: removed
tags(not in spec), tighteneddescriptionwhile keeping trigger guidance - Reduced from 175 to ~115 lines by consolidating sections — merged IP disclaimer and governing law into the General Provisions checklist, combined Term/Return/Remedies into one section
- Added Quick Start section for at-a-glance workflow
- Renamed "Guidelines" to "Pitfalls" to match the best-practices pattern
- Eliminated redundancy: removed the standalone signature block section (folded into General Provisions), collapsed verbose obligation formatting into bullet lists, stripped repeated explanatory prose
- Preserved all legal substance: CI categories, exclusion table with evidence requirements, compelled disclosure procedure, standstill/non-solicit parameters, protection period tiers, equitable relief language, and all [VERIFY] flags
No additional documents ship with this skill.
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