Hi Joseph, happy to help. I'd advise on not finding a generic NDA to fill in as without the proper guidance from an attorney you could open yourself up for exposure, which can be very costly in the end. You can find many attorneys who have reasonable rates that will be able to structure an NDA to suit your needs. My recommendation would be to map out what your deal points are in a structured outline and then provide that to the attorney so they have a starting point for a consultation. The more work you can do for them upfront will help reduce the cost of their hours to put it together.
Amanda thank you for your correct reply, but I am a paralegal by trade, my degree is in paralegal science(graduated with Honors), I read contracts in my sleep, a lot, I can change a generic one to fit my production needs. Do you have one? yes I will use my local entertainment attorney to look over it Thank you! #supportukraine
A book called "Contracts for the Film & Television Industry" by Litwak is a great resource for contract templates. However, I would second Amanda's advice - you can fill it in, but have a lawyer review it before you issue it to be signed.
Kay thank you I think I have that book in my files, looking that up now, BTW thank you for your correct reply, but I am a paralegal by trade, my degree is in paralegal science(graduated with Honors), I read contracts in my sleep, a lot, I can change a generic one to fit my production needs, then take it to a lawyer for coverage. if i have it I'll post it for all to have, THANK YOU!!! :-)
3 people like this
Hi Joseph, happy to help. I'd advise on not finding a generic NDA to fill in as without the proper guidance from an attorney you could open yourself up for exposure, which can be very costly in the end. You can find many attorneys who have reasonable rates that will be able to structure an NDA to suit your needs. My recommendation would be to map out what your deal points are in a structured outline and then provide that to the attorney so they have a starting point for a consultation. The more work you can do for them upfront will help reduce the cost of their hours to put it together.
2 people like this
Amanda thank you for your correct reply, but I am a paralegal by trade, my degree is in paralegal science(graduated with Honors), I read contracts in my sleep, a lot, I can change a generic one to fit my production needs. Do you have one? yes I will use my local entertainment attorney to look over it Thank you! #supportukraine
3 people like this
A book called "Contracts for the Film & Television Industry" by Litwak is a great resource for contract templates. However, I would second Amanda's advice - you can fill it in, but have a lawyer review it before you issue it to be signed.
2 people like this
Kay thank you I think I have that book in my files, looking that up now, BTW thank you for your correct reply, but I am a paralegal by trade, my degree is in paralegal science(graduated with Honors), I read contracts in my sleep, a lot, I can change a generic one to fit my production needs, then take it to a lawyer for coverage. if i have it I'll post it for all to have, THANK YOU!!! :-)
Thanks Joseph!