Non-disclosure agreement (NDA)
A non-disclosure agreement legally protects confidential information shared between buyer and supplier during business discussions. NDAs enable the open exchange of technical details, pricing information, business strategies, and other sensitive information without fear that the recipient will misuse or disclose it to others.
Examples
Mutual NDA: Before discussing a potential development project, both parties sign a mutual NDA protecting each other's confidential information. The NDA enables sharing of product concepts, manufacturing processes, and cost structures needed for meaningful discussions.
One-way NDA: A buyer shares proprietary designs with a potential supplier under a one-way NDA where only the buyer's information is protected. The supplier commits not to use the information except for evaluating the opportunity.
NDA for RFI/RFP: Before distributing detailed specifications in an RFP, procurement requires potential bidders to sign NDAs. This protects technical information from reaching competitors while enabling thorough supplier evaluation.
Definition
NDAs are typically early documents in supplier relationships, executed before substantive information sharing begins. Many organizations require NDAs before discussing anything beyond publicly available information with potential suppliers.
Key NDA provisions include: definition of confidential information, permitted uses, exclusions (information already known, publicly available, etc.), non-disclosure obligations, term of protection, and return or destruction of information.
NDAs don't prevent all competitive issues. They protect against misuse of the specific information shared but don't prevent competitors from independently developing similar capabilities. NDA protection is only as good as the ability to detect and enforce violations.
Some organizations use standardized NDA templates that expedite execution. Others negotiate NDA terms for each relationship, which provides customization but adds cycle time. The approach should balance protection needs with execution efficiency.
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