Drafting a Form Agreement
Step 1: Client decides sales structure
Step 2: Interview client
Step 3: Obtain precedents
Step 4: Diligence
Step 5: Draft contract
Step 6: Circulate to client and other advisors
Step 7: Collect comments and refine
Step 8: Publish official version
Step 9: Collect common problems with contract and make periodic revisions
Custom Sales Contracts
Step 1: Business negotiations
Step 2: Document terms in term sheet
Step 3: Parties resolve business terms
Step 4: Lawyer drafts first draft of contract
Step 5: Parties swap versions/provide comments
Step 6: Final version prepared and parties sign
How to Review and Comment on a Contract
Step 1: Make sure you have the right documents
Step 2: Make sure that any redlining is accurate
Step 3: Read the document from top to bottom
Step 4: Mark all of your desired changes and comments
Step 5: Cross-check old notes/documents
Step 6: THINK ABOUT WHAT IS MISSING
Step 7: Talk with your client about issues before speaking with other side
Step 8: Where appropriate, schedule a conversation
- Before you get started, clarify who will prepare the next draft
- Usually, the person receiving comments will prepare the next draft
- Before you get started, ask the other side if anything has changed on their end
- If you are preparing the next draft
- When circulating the draft, include a cover sheet explaining any deviations and outlining all open issues
- Never forget that you are both a representative of your client and an agent of your client
How to Redline
Step 1: Save received file to your hard drive
Step 2: Save a new version with a new name
Step 3: Tools/Track Changes/Accept All
Step 4: If you circulate internally and your client wants to undo your changes, accept/reject your changes so that it remains clean
BEWARE OF METADATA
DO NOT EDIT A DOCUMENT WITH REDLINES ALREADY IN IT
Signing a Contract
Step 1: MAKE SURE YOU GET THE RIGHT VERSION
Step 2: If you haven’t had drafting control over the last version, read the version to make sure it reflects all changes accurately
Step 3: Make sure all internal signoffs have been procured
Step 4: Prepare a clean version
Step 5: Decide who is going to sign first
Step 6: One approach: send 2 copies of the final version to the other side
- include cover letter
- include flags for where they need to sign
- include return envelope
Step 7: When returned, get your client to sign and return one copy to the other side
Step 8: Do a post-mortem with your client to see what you learned from this deal
Step 9: Send a congratulatory note to other side/attorneys
Step 10: Get client to calendar significant dates and develop implementation plan
Step 11: Document later conditionals dates