How Vesk works
Vesk helps you move through the review + redline + negotiate loop faster by turning a customer-drafted NDA into a secure redline package you can actually use.
Start with the contract. End with a negotiation-ready redline package and a secure deal room.
1. Upload the NDA and answer a few questions
Start by uploading the customer-drafted NDA.
Vesk then asks a few simple questions about your role in the agreement and your goal for the negotiation.
For example, you may want to sign the deal as quickly as possible. Or you may want to redline the NDA more closely to an industry-standard model agreement such as Common Paper or Bonterms.
2. Choose how aggressively you want to negotiate
Your goal affects how Vesk reviews the NDA.
If speed matters most, Vesk focuses on major risks so you can reduce negotiation friction and move toward signature faster.
If alignment to a stronger market baseline matters more, Vesk can also flag minor risks, with the understanding that raising more issues can create more back-and-forth before signature.
3. Review the free preview
Before you generate the full redline package, Vesk shows you a free assessment preview.
The preview shows how many issues Vesk flagged and the NDA’s Sign with confidence score on a scale from 0 to 100.
A lower score means the contract is more risky and more one-sided.
4. Generate the secure redline package
If you want the full output, enter your email address.
Vesk then generates the redline package and sends you a link to a secure deal room.
That package includes:
- a redlined Microsoft Word `.DOCX` with Track Changes on
- a clean `.DOCX` with the requested edits accepted
- a negotiation brief that explains what changes were made and why
- a secure deal room link for reviewing or sharing the package
5. Review, share, and negotiate in the deal room
From the secure deal room, you can review the redlined NDA, the clean version, and the negotiation brief.
You can also share the deal room with the counterparty.
The counterparty sees a more limited view designed for negotiation. That view presents the requested changes in a clear, email-like format that explains what is being asked for and why it matters.
At any time, either side can download the redlined or clean NDA and send it by email as an attachment instead.
6. Run the next round through Vesk
If the counterparty makes their own edits and sends the NDA back, you can run it through Vesk again.
Vesk identifies what changed, explains those changes in plain English, and helps you decide what to accept or reject.
It then generates a new redline package and updates the deal room for the next round.
This loop can be repeated up to three times, including the initial review + redline + negotiate cycle.
Why teams use Vesk
Most AI contract tools stop at review.
Vesk is built for the full loop: review the NDA, prepare the redline, support the negotiation, and help you handle the next round when the contract comes back.
That means less manual work, clearer negotiation support, and a more structured path from inbound NDA to signature.
Trust and scope
Vesk is currently focused on customer-drafted NDAs.
Vesk is a software tool, not a law firm, and it does not provide legal advice.
Your documents are not used to train public AI models. We keep retention limited, and we support purge requests.
NDAs are supported first. DPAs and MSAs are coming next.