Non-Disclosure Agreements ("NDA") are used to protect know-how, trade- and business secrets that are to be disclosed to negotiating partners and have significant economic value yet are not protected by copy- or patent rights. Proper drafting of the NDA ensures the confidentiality of such information. The NDA’s requirements are largely determined by the purpose of the information disclosure: In the run-up to transactions as well as in the subsequent due diligence process the disclosed information generally includes key company figures, customer and manufacturer contacts or the identity of key employees. In the case of strategic investments as well as joint ventures, the focus will be more on know-how relevant for the company’s business operation (methods, processes, technologies, etc.). At the same time, the diligent use of NDAs is part of the cross-company trade secret compliance, which is intended not only to preserve trade secrets but also to allow their commercial exploitation. Legal benchmark for the drafting of NDAs and the trade secret compliance is the German Act on the Protection of Trade Secrets ("GeschGehG").
Three key requirements must be met to obtain trade secret protection:
Obviously the information concerned must be confidential. This requires that the information or know-how in the specific composition is neither generally known nor easily accessible. The economic value of the information must lie precisely in its confidentiality.
The company must protect the information by implementing reasonable steps to keep it secret. This applies even if the information is secret as a matter of fact, i.e. in the absence of any secrecy measures, there is no legal protection. The economic value of the secret determines which measures are reasonable. The implementation of reasonable measures is a duty of the managing director/board of directors pursuant to sec. 43 (2) Limited Liability Companies Act / sec. 93 (2) Stock Corporation Act, the violation of which may lead to personal liability.
Not all information can be protected, but protection requires a legitimate interest in keeping it confidential. In the case of commercially valuable information, generally a legitimate interest can be assumed.
To ensure that these requirements are met and evidenced in case of conflict, we recommend implementing the following six measures: