Data Processing Agreement for vendor and processor relationships. This page explains what the deliverable is, why it matters, what it contains, and how it helps turn a business idea into an operating unit.
docs/DPA-TEMPLATE.md
What this deliverable is
A GDPR Article 28-compliant Data Processing Agreement template for vendor and processor relationships. Covers processing instructions, security measures, sub-processor management, data breach notification, audit rights, and data return/deletion obligations. It is written as an implementation-ready asset: specific enough for action, structured enough for review, and connected enough to support the other deliverables in the build.
Generated from your business
The page is not a generic description of docs/DPA-TEMPLATE.md. Your Deputy uses your niche, target customer, location, business model, primary offer, and secondary offers to shape the content and keep the artifact relevant.
Connected to the operating system
This deliverable is designed to work with the rest of the autonomous business unit: website, funnel, CRM, RevOps, analytics, AI/MCP tools, workflows, and self-hostable infrastructure.
Built for review and action
The output is written so an owner, operator, developer, advisor, lender, or implementation partner can understand what to do next without decoding raw generator output.
What is inside
The exact content adapts to the business model, target customer, offer, and launch scope. A typical generated version includes:
Scope & Purpose of Processing
Processing Instructions
Security Measures (Technical/Organizational)
Sub-Processor Management
Data Breach Notification
Audit Rights
Data Return & Deletion
Cross-Border Transfers
Liability & Indemnification
Term & Termination
How the builder uses it
1. Interpret
The builder extracts the niche, buyer, offer, constraints, and operational assumptions from your brief.
2. Generate
The deliverable is produced with business-specific language, concrete sections, and implementation-oriented structure.
3. Validate
Quality gates check for placeholder residue, generic copy, missing modules, broken routes, and promise-to-artifact drift.
4. Activate
The artifact becomes part of your launch package, supporting sales, operations, engineering, governance, or customer delivery.
Why it matters before launch
It reduces ambiguity
Teams can see the purpose, scope, dependencies, and expected next actions instead of guessing from scattered notes.
It improves accountability
The deliverable creates a concrete artifact that can be reviewed, improved, tested, and handed to a specialist when needed.
It supports revenue readiness
Every artifact ultimately supports acquisition, conversion, fulfillment, retention, governance, or operational scale.
Important: legal, tax, compliance, financial, and security artifacts are generated readiness assets, not professional certification or legal advice. Use qualified advisors where required.
Get Data Processing Agreement with the rest of the launch system.
A single deliverable is useful. The full value comes when this file is generated alongside the website, funnel, CRM, RevOps, payments, analytics, AI/MCP tools, workflow engine, self-hosted infrastructure, and validation gates.