prompt-pack-contract-summary-for-executives
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name: prompt-pack-contract-summary-for-executives
description: Use when a lawyer needs to summarise a contract for a non-lawyer executive in a one-page briefing covering the agreement's purpose, each party's key obligations, financial commitments, legal risks, and termination conditions — written so a busy executive can understand the agreement in under three minutes. Applicable to all contract types and jurisdictions; MENA-aware for UAE, KSA, LB, EG, and DIFC/ADGM commercial contexts.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: prompt-pack.contract-summary-for-executives
category: prompt-pack
practice_area: corporate-commercial
priority: P2
intent: [summarize, contract-summary-for-executives, executive-briefing, non-lawyer, plain-language]
related: [prompt-pack-complex-law-simple-summary, prompt-pack-convert-complex-document-into-key-points, prompt-pack-contract-risk-matrix, prompt-pack-contract-negotiation-preparation]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"
Contract Summary for Executives
An executive contract summary is not a legal analysis — it is a communication tool. Its single purpose is to enable a decision-maker who has not read the contract to understand what they are committing to and what the top risks are, in the time it takes to read a briefing note.
When to use this
- A CEO, CFO, or other C-suite executive needs to approve a contract but cannot read the full document before a board meeting or signing ceremony.
- A business development team needs to share a summary of a proposed agreement with stakeholders who are not lawyers.
- An in-house lawyer needs to accompany a contract approval request with a one-page cover note.
- A company is entering a new market in MENA and the local team needs an English-language summary of an Arabic-language contract.
- Post-signing, to onboard the operational team responsible for implementing the contract.
Required inputs
| Input | Why it matters | Sensible default |
|---|---|---|
| Contract text | The document to be summarised | User pastes or attaches the contract |
| Reviewing party name | The summary is written from one party's perspective | Ask the user |
| Target audience | Determines the technical depth and vocabulary | Default to "non-lawyer executive" unless stated otherwise |
| Any specific concerns the executive has flagged | Allows the summary to address the points most relevant to the decision | Ask the user |
Optional inputs
- Maximum page length (default: one page or approximately 500 words of body text).
- Whether financial numbers should be prominently boxed or highlighted.
- Whether the summary will be translated into Arabic for use in a MENA jurisdiction.
- Whether a recommendation (sign / negotiate / do not sign) should be included.
Document structure
The summary follows a strict five-section format matching the source skill's specification:
[Document heading]
CONTRACT BRIEFING NOTE — CONFIDENTIAL
Matter: [Description]
Parties: [Party A] and [Party B]
Date of agreement: [Date]
Prepared by: [Author]
Date prepared: [Date]
1. Purpose of the agreement
One to two sentences. Answer: what is this contract for, and why are we entering into it?
Example: "This is a three-year Master Services Agreement under which [Vendor] will provide IT infrastructure management services to [Company] across its UAE and KSA operations."
2. Key obligations — for each party
Use a two-column format:
| Our obligations (what we must do) | Their obligations (what they must do) |
|---|---|
| Pay monthly service fee of [amount] by the 15th of each month | Maintain system uptime of 99.5% measured monthly |
| Provide access to our premises and systems within [X] hours of request | Provide dedicated account manager and support team |
| Give [30]-day notice of any change in our requirements | Resolve critical incidents within [4] hours |
Keep to 4–6 bullet points per column. Omit minor or housekeeping obligations.
3. Financial commitments
State all monetary commitments clearly:
- Annual value: [Amount] (or total contract value over [X] years: [Amount]).
- Payment schedule: [Monthly / quarterly / milestone-based].
- Currency: [AED / USD / SAR / etc.].
- Price escalation: [State if there is an annual price increase mechanism — e.g., CPI-linked or fixed %].
- Financial penalties or liabilities: If we breach [key obligation], we are liable for penalties of up to [amount] or [formula].
- Liability cap: Our maximum total liability is capped at [amount]; theirs is capped at [amount].
- Note on financial provisions in MENA context: In UAE and KSA onshore contexts, payments described as "interest" may raise Sharia considerations. If the contract contains such provisions, flag for legal review before the executive signs.
4. Legal risks
List the top 3–5 legal risks in plain language, ordered by severity:
Risk 1 — [Title] [Severity: High/Medium/Low]
[One sentence explaining the risk in plain terms.]
Action: [What the executive should know or authorize.]
Example:
Risk 1 — Uncapped liability for data breaches [High]
If our data systems cause a client data breach, we have no monetary cap on our liability for that specific type of loss. This is unusual; most of our other agreements cap liability at 12 months' fees.
Action: Legal recommends we negotiate a cap before signing.
Risk 2 — Termination for convenience penalty [Medium]
If we terminate this agreement before the end of the three-year term, we owe [Vendor] a cancellation fee equal to six months' fees regardless of the reason for termination.
Action: Acceptable if we are confident in the three-year commitment; flag if there is strategic uncertainty.
5. Termination conditions
State clearly:
- Who can terminate and when? (Both parties / one party only / notice period required.)
- Termination for cause: Triggers (material breach, insolvency, regulatory action) and cure period (typically 30 days' written notice to cure).
- Termination for convenience: Notice period required; any financial consequence (e.g., cancellation fee, obligation to pay remaining minimum fees).
- Automatic expiry: Does the agreement expire automatically or renew automatically?
- What happens at the end: Transition assistance obligations; data return/destruction; survival of confidentiality and IP provisions.
Recommendation (optional):
[Safe to sign / Recommend negotiating [X] before signing / Do not sign until [issue] is resolved.]
Prepared by: [Author / Legal team]
Note: This summary is intended as a briefing for business decision-making only. It is not a substitute for full legal review. Please contact [Legal contact] with any questions.
Drafting standards
- Maximum 500 words of body text (excluding tables and the header).
- No defined terms in parentheses — if a term matters, explain it in plain English.
- Lead with numbers: executives want to know the financial commitment in the first 30 seconds.
- The "Legal risks" section should be honest about severity — do not downplay risks to avoid awkward conversations.
- If the contract is in Arabic and the summary is in English (or vice versa), state this and note that the official version governs.
What a good executive summary is not
- Not a clause-by-clause legal review — that is a different document.
- Not a redline — if the summary identifies a problem, it points to the risk; the redline is a separate work product.
- Not legal advice to the executive as an individual — it is information to enable a business decision by the company.
Related skills
- [[prompt-pack-complex-law-simple-summary]]
- [[prompt-pack-convert-complex-document-into-key-points]]
- [[prompt-pack-contract-risk-matrix]]
- [[prompt-pack-contract-negotiation-preparation]]
- [[prompt-pack-client-advisory-note]]