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pm-skills/pm-toolkit/commands/draft-nda.md
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Pawel Huryn 77dbdfa1b9 v1.0
2026-03-02 00:36:23 +01:00

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description, argument-hint
description argument-hint
Draft a Non-Disclosure Agreement between two parties with jurisdiction-appropriate clauses <parties and context>

/draft-nda -- NDA Drafting

Draft a professional Non-Disclosure Agreement customized to your situation. Covers information types, jurisdiction, term, and clearly marks clauses that need legal review.

Invocation

/draft-nda Mutual NDA between our startup and a potential enterprise customer
/draft-nda One-way NDA for a freelance contractor accessing our codebase

Workflow

Step 1: Gather Context

Ask:

  • Who are the parties? (company names and roles)
  • Mutual or one-way NDA?
  • What information is being protected? (trade secrets, code, business data, customer data)
  • Jurisdiction? (state/country for governing law)
  • Duration? (how long should confidentiality last)
  • Any specific concerns? (non-compete, non-solicit, IP ownership)

Step 2: Draft the NDA

Apply the draft-nda skill:

Generate a complete NDA covering:

  • Parties and recitals
  • Definition of confidential information (with specific examples)
  • Obligations of the receiving party
  • Exclusions (public knowledge, independent development, etc.)
  • Term and survival
  • Return/destruction of materials
  • Remedies
  • Governing law and jurisdiction
  • Standard boilerplate (severability, entire agreement, amendments)

Step 3: Deliver

## Non-Disclosure Agreement

[Full NDA text with marked sections]

### Clauses Requiring Legal Review
| Clause | Why It Needs Review | Consideration |
|--------|-------------------|--------------|

### Plain-Language Summary
[What this NDA means in simple terms for non-lawyers]

Save as markdown. Offer to export as DOCX for signing.

Notes

  • This is a starting point — always recommend review by qualified legal counsel
  • Mark any clause that involves significant legal risk with a ⚠️ flag
  • Include plain-language annotations so non-lawyers understand what they're agreeing to
  • Mutual NDAs are generally preferred — they're fairer and faster to negotiate