When organizations think about adopting contract management software, they often start with preconceptions. These “myths” aren’t always totally wrong – but they can be misleading. Here are six contract management software myths that should be reconsidered.
There are two reasons why this observation needs to be reconsidered: reduced costs and reduced risk. A simple time-and-motion analysis of your routine processes may surprise you. Contract searches, requests, routing and follow-up, and obligation monitoring take more time from your staff than you or they suspect. The information exchange and tracking parts of these jobs are what contract management software reduces dramatically, saving time. Integration with e-signature reduces contract turnaround time and makes business happen much quicker.
If your company uses outside legal counsel, contract management software can save you money spent on redundant reviews of standard language; once you have the appropriate terms and conditions associated with the right contract templates, you can deploy these standard contracts without re-involving counsel.
As for risk, ask yourself: Is my company too small to need to defend itself in court? Too small to worry about recovering funds for late delivery? Too small to be concerned if a profitable agreement expires? Too small to assign responsibility for deliverables? The terms of your contracts are tools to minimize risk and increase certainty as you pursue business opportunities. Setting up obligations with due dates and owners is a simple matter in contract management software. It creates confidence that you and your counterparty will live up to the agreement or have prompt access to the remediation you agreed to when the contract was signed.
In short: Collect some data and consider your return on investment over one-to-three years. An ROI model that takes into account reduced process time, elimination of redundant review, and reduced risk may point you toward adoption of a modern contract management software solution.
Myth 2. Contract management software means substituting a vendor's process for my company's processes.
A common concern is that contract management software will limit how your team creates and approves contracts. For instance, it can be hard to picture how a software program will safely provide business users with approved contracts while alerting contract managers to contract requests that need their involvement. Similarly, people question how the same system that routes a contract for one simple approval can stay on top of contracts that require multi-stage review and approval through legal, finance and executive levels of an organization.
The truth is that workflows that recognize “if-then” conditions can direct a contract document with ease once the process is clear. The two components needed for clarity are
Your organization is already using this knowledge, even if your approval process is manual.
The key feature to look for in contract management software is the ability of your administrators to configure the processes themselves. With some contract management software vendors, changes to a CLM software's processes beyond what is offered out of the box is only possible through the vendor – when they can schedule it and for a service fee. Contract Management Software with user-friendly configuration lets contract management automation get started on your terms and allows for quick adaptation as personnel and business conditions change.
The best contract management software will be able to mirror any consistent contract process you are following now. As you look at software, be ready to test your process in a demonstration – and include in your demo scenario the need to change the process to meet a new condition.
The fact is that contracts can be securely managed in the cloud or within an organization’s own network of servers. The security of either system depends on the application of up-to-date knowledge by trained, trustworthy IT professionals. In the case of your own on-premise servers (and probably you are backing your systems up with cloud-based servers), your IT personnel are trained to avoid system vulnerabilities, correct bugs, and keep software up to date on both the servers and individual devices. Any document received into the system (say, a draft contract emailed to you for review) will be checked for viruses or malware – but only because your IT has kept the email scanning software up to date.
The cloud is fundamentally no different. For most organizations, the cloud means one of the large platforms such as Microsoft 365/Azure or Amazon Web Services. Both Microsoft and Amazon have invested heavily in the security of these systems. Microsoft, for example, restricts physical access to its data centers, regularly backs up data, and encrypts data both at rest and via the network. Secure access to information can require two-factor authentication. Azure compliance services include FedRAMP and DoD compliance certifications, CJIS state-level agreements, the ability to issue HIPAA Business Associate Agreements, and support for IRS 1075. Microsoft 365 allows for security rules with alerts, custom permissions, IT device protection, anti-malware and anti-spam protection.
Technically speaking, the cloud is as secure an environment as your own on-premise server environment. One concern raised when cloud storage was new was the portability of your data – in this case, your contracts and related documents – in case you decide to discontinue service with your cloud provider. Cloud service providers offer security in this regard. Clear contractual agreements with all reputable cloud providers ensure that access to your data cannot be interfered with by the provider, and that your documents can be moved to another provider or environment at your discretion. Microsoft’s Trust Center offers more information on security concerns.
Trust in your contract management process – if it’s a manual process – means trust in the people who exercise judgment in drafting, approving, and executing contracts. To many observers, contract automation would seem to take these people and their judgment out of the picture. They envision many scenarios:
The concerns are sincere, no doubt – but they are easily addressed. First, most contract management software vendors readily provide a permission model that controls who can access contracts and who cannot, from entire categories of business users to individuals. The best contract management software vendors also control whose approvals are needed for contracts to be created, moved forward, amended, approved, and signed, allowing for oversight by the “gatekeepers” at any stage. In fact, control of contracts is often increased once only in-system contracts are permitted for business to move forward.
Contract management software can open contract access and processes to business users who were previously dependent on contract managers or legal. To increase access securely requires some forethought and use of the tools available in a contract management system. For example,
The balance of openness and control that is right for your business is precisely what a good contract management system can deliver.
For many organizations, getting legacy contracts into a single electronic repository is the point of purchasing contract management software. They imagine that this will be a simple drag-and-drop operation, or at most may involve some scanning of paper contracts. With final executed contracts in one place, finding them will no longer require searching in one or more file cabinets and shared drives.
What this picture leaves out is the role of metadata and relationships in contract management software. Metadata is contained in separate fields associated with a contract document, for example, contract name, contract type, counterparty name, start and end date, contract value, and administrative data such as approver, manager, and renewal date. Moving contracts into a new software system requires moving (or providing) the metadata for each contract. Without it, the contracts are in passive storage, findable but not working for you. Metadata allows for speedy, exact searching and reporting on contracts, and filtering to narrow the results in a search or report. Metadata also drives workflows such as approval and fulfillment tasks, and review and renewal reminders.
Document relationships are also important, especially between contracts and supporting documents such as SOWs, budgets, certificates of insurance, consent forms, and others. Some of these supporting documents may themselves require renewal or updating in the course of a multi-year contract, something a contract management system can make much easier.
Whether you are moving contracts from old software to a new one or are starting from scratch, you will need a plan for migrating the contracts, their metadata, and their relationships. That process is often a technical challenge. Understanding from the vendor how the migration will happen is a key step in adopting contract management software. An experienced vendor will have tools (such as migration scripts) that can help to smoothly and reliably migrate thousands of contracts to a new system, along with the data that will make the contracts useful for search, reporting, and workflows.
Not out of the gate. It is true that combined AI and human systems, adapted to particular documents, with trained machine learning and human quality control, can reach accuracy levels greater than 99%. But that level of accuracy also requires users to be clear about their goals, organized in their approach, savvy in their application of this new technology.
Here are questions to ask yourself.
The answers to these questions make clear how close to 100% an AI solution will be for your particular contract management use case.
Contract management software helps professionals save time and more effectively manage contracts. Overlooking that winning combination of people and software is at the root of many misunderstandings. Understanding how contract management software has been successfully applied in real-life business settings (for example, through case studies) will help you take its measure – and move beyond the myths.
Contracts 365 is the leading Contract Management Software for businesses that run Microsoft 365. Please don’t hesitate to reach out to us or even better, request a demo, and we can show you how it works in real time.