About Vesk

Vesk is an AI-powered tool built to help founders, agency owners, and growth leaders review, redline, and negotiate customer-drafted NDAs with more confidence.

We are starting with NDAs because repeatability, structure, and defensibility matter more than superficial breadth. DPAs and MSAs are coming next.

The problem we built Vesk to solve

For many non-lawyers, the hardest part of a customer-drafted NDA is not opening the document.

It is figuring out what matters, deciding what to change, applying those edits in a clean and usable format, and then explaining and supporting those changes once the negotiation starts.

That pressure gets worse when the other side is a larger company with its own legal team. Even when your asks are reasonable, it can be hard to know how to explain them clearly and credibly without sounding overly aggressive or out of your depth.

Many people can get feedback from ChatGPT, Gemini, or another prompt-driven tool. Far fewer feel confident turning that feedback into a repeatable Word redline and supporting the negotiation across rounds when the NDA comes back.

We built Vesk because that part of the process is still too manual, too fragmented, and too stressful.

How Vesk helps

Most AI contract tools focus mainly on review. They summarize terms, answer questions, or flag possible issues.

Vesk is built for the harder and more important part of the process: the review + redline + negotiation loop.

Vesk uses a rules-based, deterministic system calibrated against industry-standard model agreements to review customer-drafted NDAs, generate Microsoft Word redlines, and provide negotiation-ready rationale to explain and support those changes.

AI is used selectively within guardrails for hard-to-classify cases and targeted redline drafting, so outputs stay more repeatable, structured, and defensible than prompt-driven workflows.

The goal is not just to identify issues. The goal is to help users move from inbound NDA to negotiation-ready output with less manual work, less review risk, and more confidence.

What you get

Vesk returns a secure redline package designed to help you respond, not just review.

That package includes:

  • a negotiation brief that explains and supports the requested edits
  • a redlined Microsoft Word `.DOCX` with Track Changes on
  • a clean `.DOCX` with the requested edits accepted
  • a secure deal room link you can review yourself or share with the counterparty

Instead of piecing together analysis, manual redlines, and ad hoc negotiation notes across separate tools, you get a more organized handoff that is ready to use.

Who Vesk is for

Vesk is built for people who receive customer-drafted NDAs and need to get to safe, reasonable terms quickly without sending every agreement to counsel.

That includes:

  • startup founders
  • digital agency owners
  • growth and sales leaders

It is especially useful when:

  • a customer sends over their NDA
  • you want a more repeatable way to review and redline it
  • you do not want to manually apply edits in Word every time
  • you want plain-English rationale you can stand behind if the other side or their counsel pushes back
  • you want less manual work across negotiation rounds

Trust and privacy

Vesk is a software tool, not a law firm. It does not provide legal advice or replace a lawyer for complex, unusual, or high-stakes matters.

Vesk is also not a general-purpose AI legal chat product. It is built for a specific job: helping non-lawyers handle customer-drafted NDAs more efficiently and with more confidence by supporting the review, redline, and negotiation process together.

Your documents are not used to train public AI models. We keep retention limited, and we support purge requests.

For heavily negotiated or higher-risk matters, legal counsel still matters. Vesk is designed to help with repeatable NDA workflows where consistency, speed, and clearer support for requested changes can make a real difference.

Where we are now

Vesk is currently pre-launch.

We are starting with customer-drafted NDAs because they are a common, high-friction workflow where repeatability and negotiation support matter. Our focus is narrow on purpose: do one job well, make the output usable, and help users move through each negotiation round with more confidence.

NDAs are supported first. DPAs and MSAs are coming next.

If that sounds like your workflow, join the waitlist and we will keep you updated.