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NDAs — When Do You Actually Need One?

When Malaysian businesses need non-disclosure agreements and what a legally sound NDA must include under Malaysian law.

Lawgistics February 1, 2025 4 min read

Non-Disclosure Agreements get over-used and under-drafted in equal measure. Some founders send one before every introductory call. Others never bother. Neither approach is right.

When you probably don't need one

If you're sharing general information about your business — what you do, your team, your pricing — an NDA isn't necessary. Most early-stage investor conversations don't require them either; VCs and angel investors typically won't sign NDAs at the initial meeting stage, and insisting on one can signal inexperience.

When you definitely do

  • Sharing proprietary technology, source code, or product roadmaps with potential partners
  • Engaging a contractor or freelancer who will have access to confidential client data
  • Early-stage acquisition or merger discussions
  • Disclosing manufacturing processes, formulas, or trade secrets to suppliers

One-way vs. mutual

A one-way (unilateral) NDA protects one party's information. A mutual NDA protects both. Use mutual NDAs when both parties are sharing confidential information — e.g., in a joint venture discussion.

What a Malaysian NDA needs

Define "Confidential Information" specifically — don't just say "all information shared." Include what's excluded (publicly known information, independently developed information). State the term of confidentiality obligation. Specify governing law as Malaysian law and courts with jurisdiction.