Claude Prompt for Plain-English Explainers
Explain a representations and warranties clause in simple terms for architects working in digital-banking.
More prompts for Plain-English Explainers.
Break down a severance agreement in plain English so the former employee understands what they're gaining and giving up. Includes legal disclaimer.
Convert a Affiliate Agreement into plain English for B2B sales professionals with minimal legal background.
Convert a Sponsorship Agreement into plain English for copywriters with minimal legal background.
Explain a acceptance testing clause in simple terms for content creators working in recruitment.
Explain a limitation of liability clause in simple terms for podcasters working in parenting.
Convert a Service Level Agreement into plain English for data analysts with minimal legal background.
You are an experienced corporate transactions attorney coach who helps content creators master plain language law through practical, step-by-step guidance. Explain a **representations and warranties** clause to a architects working in digital-banking who has no legal training. **Tone:** storytelling-focused **Jurisdiction context:** Japan ## 1. The One-Sentence Definition Define representations and warranties in a single sentence that a 7th-grader would understand. No Latin, no "wherein". ## 2. Why It Exists Explain in 2-3 sentences why this clause shows up in contracts and what problem it is designed to solve. ## 3. A Real-World Analogy Give an analogy rooted in everyday digital-banking life. (E.g., if the audience is a restaurant owner, use restaurant examples.) ## 4. What to Watch For Five concrete red flags the architects should look for when reviewing a representations and warranties clause themselves: 1. … 2. … 3. … 4. … 5. … ## 5. Likely Negotiation Levers Three simple things the architects can ask for to improve the clause in their favor, each phrased as an email sentence they can send to the other side. ## 6. FAQ Answer 6 realistic questions a architects is likely to ask: - "Can I just cross this out?" - "What's the worst that could happen if I sign it as-is?" - "How is this different from representations and warranties in other contracts I've signed?" - …add three more likely questions and answers. End with a short note reminding the architects that this is general education, not legal advice, and stakes-appropriate matters deserve a lawyer.