Ask your employment contract the awkward questions.
Upload your offer letter or contract and ask MemX a plain-English question like 'how long is my notice period?' or 'does my non-compete actually apply?' It reads the document, finds the clause, and shows you the exact page it came from.
Try MemX FreeHow It Works
Add your contract
Forward the offer letter or signed contract PDF, or snap a photo of the pages. MemX parses the document, runs OCR on any scans, and extracts the key terms for search.
Ask in plain English
Type or speak a question like "can I work for a competitor after I leave?" MemX runs semantic search over your own contract, retrieving by meaning rather than the exact legal wording.
Get the answer with its clause
MemX gives you a direct answer and shows the exact clause and page it came from, so you can read the original wording before you sign or resign.
Why Use This Feature
Read the contract before you sign it
Offer-letter excitement makes it easy to skim the fine print. A plain-English question surfaces the clause that actually binds you, before your signature does.
Understand your non-compete for real
Ask exactly what the non-compete and non-solicit clauses restrict, for how long, and where. The answer comes from your own contract, not a generic explainer that may not match your terms.
Know who owns your side projects
IP-assignment language is where personal projects quietly become company property. Ask what the contract claims and MemX shows you the exact wording.
Every answer is traceable
When MemX answers, it shows you the original clause and page. You are never relying on an unsourced summary in a negotiation or an exit.
Compare offers side by side
Keep two offers in the same memory and ask how their notice, equity or severance terms differ, so you compare what is written rather than what you remember.
Private by architecture
Your contract holds your salary and personal terms. MemX is private by architecture, with customer-managed keys and AES-256-GCM field-level encryption, so it is never sitting in plaintext.