Last updated
Feb 3, 2026
AI Draft is Mantle’s AI‑assisted drafting engine that turns your legal documents into accurate cap table records in seconds, so you stop re‑typing terms and start just reviewing and approving. It’s built for founders, operators, and law firms who are tired of copy‑pasting from PDFs into spreadsheets or forms.
What AI Draft does
Reads your equity documents (e.g. SAFEs, share purchase agreements, option grants, charters, plans).
Extracts key terms like stakeholder names, amounts, prices, and dates.
Creates draft equity records in Mantle that you can quickly review, tweak if needed, and publish to your cap table.
Think of it as moving from "fill out every field by hand" to "upload document → check that everything looks right → click confirm."
Why use AI Draft instead of manual entry
Founders and law firms typically deal with:
Long PDF agreements full of numbers and dates
Repeated copy-paste into cap table tools and spreadsheets
High stakes for small mistakes (wrong strike price, wrong number of shares, wrong dates)
AI Draft:
Saves time: Hours of manual entry become minutes of review.
Reduces errors: AI reads directly from the documents.
Scales with you: Handles everything from a single grant to bulk upload of many securities with the same accuracy focus.
How to use AI Draft
The exact buttons may differ by security type, but the pattern is similar for shares, options, SAFEs, etc.
Start a new draft
Go to the relevant section in Mantle (e.g. Securities → Shares, Options, or SAFEs).
Click Draft to begin creating a security.
Choose the AI Draft option.
Upload your document(s)
Upload the signed or final document.
Mantle's AI reads the document and extracts key data points.
Review extracted fields
Make adjustments directly in the draft form as needed.
Confirm and publish
Once everything looks correct, click Review and then Publish.
For founders and firms who handle a lot of equity paperwork, AI Draft is meant to become the default way you create accurate records, with manual entry reserved mainly for one‑off edge cases.