When only one side has secrets to protect — a startup pitching investors, a client briefing a contractor — the symmetric mutual NDA is overkill. The one-way NDA puts the burden on the actual recipient, which is who you actually need to bind.
Who this pack is for
You're sharing confidential information with someone who isn't sharing equivalent information back. The most common scenarios: a startup founder pitching investors, advisors, or potential acquirers and disclosing financials, customer lists, or product roadmaps; a company briefing a vendor, contractor, or consultant on internal processes, source code, or trade secrets that the vendor needs to see to do the work; a brand briefing an agency on an upcoming campaign that needs to stay confidential until launch. The receiving party is being given access; the disclosing party is doing the disclosing.
When to use it
Sign before any confidential information changes hands. The NDA must precede the disclosure; signing it after the fact is much weaker because the receiving party can argue they were already exposed without obligation. Sequence: high-level introduction → NDA execution → detailed disclosure. For investor pitches, many sophisticated investors will refuse to sign NDAs on principle (they see too many decks to track separate confidentiality terms) — pitch with awareness of this and protect your most sensitive information by deferring its disclosure to the diligence stage when an NDA can be required. For contractors and vendors who must sign, executing the NDA is part of onboarding before scope-of-work briefing.
What it doesn't cover
This is a one-way NDA: only the Recipient is bound to confidentiality. It does not cover situations where the Recipient will also share their own confidential information back — for those, use the mutual NDA. It does not include non-compete, non-solicitation, or assignment-of-IP provisions; those are separate and have different legal treatment. It does not cover information shared in employment relationships (which are governed by employment confidentiality clauses) or relationships with sophisticated parties who require their own NDA forms (large investors, big-tech acquirers). And it does not protect against disclosure that's permitted under exclusions: information already public, information the Recipient already knew, information the Recipient develops independently, or disclosure compelled by law.
State-specific notes
Rules vary by jurisdiction. Below are notes for the states where one-way nda runs into the most variance. If your state isn't listed, default to your state's tenant-rights handbook or local legal aid.
Common questions
Pike provides plain-language legal information, not legal advice. State and local rules change. If money, custody, or your housing is on the line, talk to a licensed attorney or your local legal aid office.