adamwolfe2 points Mike at the deal room, not the courtroom

A fork of Mike deployed inside AM Collective, tuned for the documents investors actually wrestle with.

contract-reviewsummarization

adamwolfe2 has published an end-user guide for a live deployment serving AM Collective's investment staff - and it reads like a product, not a coding project. The framing is built for deal teams rather than counsel: credit agreements, shareholder agreements from co-investors, vendor NDAs, engagement letters, and portfolio-company financings.

The interesting part is which built-in workflows are in active use. There's a structured 21-point breakdown of financing documents (parties, facilities, covenants, security, defaults), a 15-point read on shareholder agreements covering board makeup, anti-dilution and deadlock, a conditions-precedent checklist delivered as a formatted Word document, and a side-by-side tabular comparison across documents. The guide is blunt about the economics, pegging a junior associate's first read of a credit agreement at $400-800 and a CP checklist at the kind of fee a firm bills in the thousands.

So what Worth a look for legal-ops and deal-side teams curious how Mike behaves as a working investment tool rather than a lawyer's assistant.

View this fork on GitHub →

Spotted something wrong? Or know the PR text has fresher detail than the writeup above?

Commits in this thread

1 commit from adamwolfe2/mike-amcollective, oldest first. Source extracted verbatim from the harvested git log.

SHA Subject Author Date
9033f23f docs: add usage guide covering workflows, use cases, and tips adamwolfe2 2026-04-30 ↗ GitHub

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