Templates fit nobody. Descriptions fit you
Downloadable NDA templates come in two kinds: too generic to say anything, and written for someone else's situation with a different jurisdiction, term and definition of confidential information. Editing them into shape requires exactly the legal attention you were trying to avoid.
Generation works from your facts. Whether the deal is a contractor seeing your codebase, an investor reading your metrics, or two companies comparing roadmaps, the draft is built around that: the right kind of NDA (one-way or mutual), obligations that match what is actually being shared, and a term that fits the relationship. The conventional protections, exclusions, return of materials, remedies, are all present because a serious counterparty will look for them.
From draft to signed in one toolkit
The draft downloads as DOCX for review, because you should read an agreement before signing it, and so should the counterparty's amendments get tracked somewhere sane. When the wording is settled, Word to PDF freezes it, Sign PDF collects the signatures without a printer, and the vault remembers the term when, two years later, someone asks whether the NDA still applies. If you are on the receiving end of someone else's NDA instead, run it through Contract Analysis before you sign.