Tag: contract bottlenecks

Why Legal Departments Keep Losing Control of Spend, Contracts, and Workflows

Legal departments losing control of spend, contracts,

Legal departments are being asked to do more with less. More contracts, tighter budgets, shorter timelines, and yet the tools many teams rely on were not built to handle that kind of pressure. The result is legal departments that spend more time maintaining systems than running them.

This is not a technology problem. It is a structural one. And it shows up in predictable ways: invoices reviewed line by line, contracts tracked in spreadsheets, approvals chased over email, and intake requests arriving through every channel except a standardized one. Each of these habits looks manageable in isolation. Together, they add up to a legal department that is constantly reacting instead of planning.

The cost of disconnected work

When legal workflows are fragmented, small gaps compound quickly. Requests get approved without a clear understanding of downstream effort. Matters start without budgets or timelines attached. Spend issues surface late because intake context never carried forward. Contracts stall because urgency or ownership was never clear. Reporting becomes reactive because intake data never became part of the operational record.

What teams experience as chaos is really disconnected workflow management showing up early. The fix is not adding more structure to intake. It is connecting intake to everything that follows: matters, spend tracking, contract workflows, and reporting. When that connection exists, context moves with the work. Status updates happen automatically as tasks progress. Visibility improves before bottlenecks form.

The spend problem nobody talks about early enough

Legal spend spikes rarely happen suddenly. They are the result of unnoticed, compounding signals that accumulate over time. By the time leadership is asking questions, the spiral is already in motion.

The early stages often look like stability. Budgets seem intact. Teams feel busy but not alarmed. The signals are subtle:

  • Outside counsel rates increasing through one-off exceptions that quietly become routine
  • Matter scoping done at a high level to avoid slowing intake
  • Intake volume growing without clarity on complexity or downstream costs

As pressure mounts, teams respond by adding structure: more invoice review steps, more approval layers, more reporting. On the surface, this creates a sense of control. In practice, it often shifts effort without improving visibility. Legal teams end up spending more time on line-item reviews than on analyzing patterns. ELM systems function as repositories rather than sources of insight.

disconnected legal workflows

By the time leadership and finance are asking hard questions, the focus shifts from understanding to urgency. The underlying issues developed over months. The response is expected in days.

Recognizing the spiral early requires more than manual reviews or dashboards. It requires connecting intake, matters, and invoices so that cost drivers are visible before work begins, and so that behavior patterns can be identified before they become habits. Onit’s Legal Spend Spiral Guide breaks down exactly how this drift happens and what early signals to watch for.

Invoice review is not a strategy for modern legal departments

Manual invoice review is one of the most persistent drains in legal operations. A junior lawyer averages around $74 per contract review. The process is slow, inconsistent, and prone to missing issues that repeat across matters.

Beyond cost, manual review creates compliance risk. Billing guidelines only work when applied consistently. When enforcement happens after the fact, it leads to disputes, write-offs, and uneven application. Over time, firms learn where guidelines bend, which undermines both cost control and credibility.

Automated systems flag violations before they reach a reviewer’s desk. Billing rules applied proactively shift conversations with outside counsel away from retroactive corrections and toward shared expectations. That shift matters. It reduces friction, improves compliance, and eliminates recurring manual cleanup.

Legal eBilling is not just about paying invoices faster. It is about gaining the clarity and control that makes smarter decisions possible. With clean, reliable data, legal departments can forecast budgets, monitor trends, and show measurable value to the business. Legal ops teams that adopt eBilling typically see faster invoice turnaround, fewer disputes, and greater alignment with finance.

Contract management that actually moves the business

Contracts fuel both revenue and risk. According to the World Commerce & Contracting organization, effective contract management can boost a company’s profitability by up to 9% of its annual revenue. Without a structured system, cycle times drag, obligations get missed, and opportunities slip away. The five most common signs a company needs a better approach to contract management are:

  • Inability to make changes: Processes and technologies that cannot accommodate renewal data, pricing changes, and evolving legal requirements create compounding risk over time.
  • Information silos and manual processes: A lack of a centralized, accessible location for contract information that tracks changes in real time leads to human error, bottlenecked contract cycles, and limited process control.
  • Inconsistent legal language: Gaps in standardized language introduce risk and confusion. If contracts consistently have language consistency issues, the door opens to unexpected legal challenges.
  • Struggles between timeliness and risk: Legal teams prefer to review contracts thoroughly. Sales teams need to close deals quickly. When that friction becomes chronic, it signals a need for better contract management processes.
  • Lack of insight into contract processes and variables: When Legal does not have visibility into contract terms, obligations, and value, it cannot ensure the business is getting the right value for deals.

Effective contract lifecycle management (CLM) addresses all five of these gaps. It captures key metadata, enforces approvals, and maintains audit-ready records so teams can spot and address risks before they escalate. Intelligent alerts and obligation tracking help teams stay ahead of critical dates, reducing revenue leakage and strengthening supplier and customer relationships.

The seven stages of a sound CLM process are:

  1. Planning
  2. Implementation
  3. Pre-contract
  4. Handover
  5. Contract
  6. Pre-renewal
  7. Post-contract
contract bottlenecks for legal departments

Each stage carries distinct risks when managed manually. The pre-renewal stage is particularly high-stakes. Missed renewals, overlooked obligations, and renegotiation opportunities lost to inattention all have real financial consequences.

AI has a role, but it starts with people and data

AI is changing how legal work gets done, but the teams that see the most benefit are not the ones that deployed the most tools. They are the ones that prepared their data, aligned their teams, and chose the right problems to solve first.

Research from Onit’s AI Center of Excellence found that large language models are now performing contract reviews with a level of precision that rivals professional legal service providers. The speed gap is significant:

  • Junior lawyers: approximately 56 minutes per contract
  • LPOs: approximately 201 minutes per contract
  • GPT-4: approximately 4.7 minutes per contract
  • Claude 2.0: approximately 1.63 minutes per contract

The cost difference is equally striking. A junior lawyer averages around $74 per contract. Top LLMs perform the same task for between $0.02 and $0.25.

This is not an argument for removing humans from the process. It is an argument for using AI to handle repetitive work so that legal professionals can focus on exception handling, negotiation, and strategic analysis. When AI handles the tedious, humans can lead with insight and creativity.

Generative AI also addresses the bottleneck in contract management by automating drafting and review processes. It can flag non-compliant clauses, propose alternative wording, and reduce the time needed for contract approvals by up to 70%. For legal departments managing large volumes of work, that kind of capacity shift is meaningful.

But AI relies on data that is clean, structured, and accessible. Without it, models return unreliable results and adoption stalls. The most effective teams embed data governance into their operations, assign owners to critical data sets, and create rules that keep information accurate as new matters, vendors, and invoices enter the system. For a practical framework on where to begin, the AI Legal Ops Playbook offers a useful starting point for teams ready to move from experimentation to execution.

What the right tech stack actually needs to do

Legal operations tools that claim AI functionality need to do more than generate summaries. They should automate approval workflows, intelligently triage legal intake, and reduce manual touchpoints. The best AI does not just respond. It anticipates and learns. It works in the background to keep things moving so your team can focus on legal strategy, not software management.

legal tech stack

Beyond AI, the four functions that matter most in a modern legal operations platform are:

  • Spend management and invoicing: Tracking spend is not enough. Tools should help control it by flagging billing violations before they reach a reviewer’s desk and surfacing which vendors are overspending.
  • Automated workflow: The right workflow engine centralizes intake, automatically assigns tasks based on priority or matter type, and gives full visibility into what is moving and what is stuck.
  • Analytics built for legal ops: Reporting should take a few clicks, not days. A legal operations platform should give real-time visibility into the health of matters, spend, vendor performance, and internal resourcing.
  • Integration with existing systems: Legal systems should operate as part of a connected environment. Matter, spend, and vendor data should flow automatically across legal and finance without re-entry or reconciliation.

When these functions work together, legal departments stop reacting and start planning. Visibility improves without additional reporting effort. Work moves faster without sacrificing control.

The real question for legal departments

Legal departments that can demonstrate the value of their operations with accurate data shift conversations with finance from cost justification to opportunity identification. The teams that get there are not the ones with the most tools. They are the ones that made deliberate choices about where to start, what to fix, and how to keep momentum going.

If your current processes are costing more time than they save, that is your signal. Download the Legal Spend Spiral guide to learn how to identify the early warning signs of rising legal costs and break the spiral before it becomes a budget conversation you are not prepared for.

Join the conversation

The OnPoint community is where legal ops professionals connect, share what is working, and build the skills to lead through change. If you are looking to sharpen your AI fluency, the community’s AI literacy resources are a strong place to start. Come find your people.

5 Benefits of Contract Lifecycle Management (CLM) software in 2026

Updated March 2026

Contracts sit at the center of every business relationship, yet most organizations still manage them through a patchwork of emails, shared drives, and manual tracking. The result is predictable: slow turnaround, missed renewals, siloed contract data, and compliance gaps that surface at the worst possible moments. Contract Lifecycle Management (CLM) software addresses these problems directly by centralizing contracts and workflows in one place, automating routine tasks, and reducing risk while speeding execution.

For Legal, procurement, and sales teams alike, the business case for CLM is no longer abstract. It shows up in faster deal cycles, fewer compliance incidents, and cleaner data that supports better decisions. Understanding the full scope of what CLM delivers across an organization makes it easier to build the case internally and select the right solution.

Operational efficiency and speed

Manual contract processes create compounding delays. Drafting starts from scratch. Approvals route through inboxes. Redlines travel back and forth without a clear version history. By the time a contract reaches signature, days or weeks have passed on work that should take hours.

CLM software removes this friction by automating repetitive work across the full contract lifecycle. Pre-approved templates allow teams to generate accurate drafts in minutes. Configurable workflows route contracts through approvals without bottlenecks. Integrated eSignature capabilities finalize agreements faster without requiring separate tools or manual steps.

Benefits of contract lifecycle management software

For sales teams specifically, self-serve templates and automated approvals help close deals faster without waiting on Legal to draft from the beginning. Contract approval times can be reduced by up to 80% with automated workflows and instant visibility into where each agreement stands. When contracts move faster, revenue recognition accelerates alongside them.

Reduced risk and better compliance

Every manually managed contract introduces risk. Clause inconsistencies slip through when language is negotiated informally. Renewal deadlines pass unnoticed when tracking depends on individual memory or spreadsheet reminders. Regulatory changes require batch reviews that manual processes struggle to execute at scale.

CLM software addresses this through centralized governance. A single repository with version control ensures that the most current, compliant version of each contract is always accessible. Standardized templates and clause libraries reduce language risk by maintaining consistency across agreements. Automated alerts flag obligations, renewal dates, and deadline milestones before they become problems.

For Legal teams managing compliance-heavy industries, CLM reduces review bottlenecks and ensures compliance across changing regulations by capturing key metadata, enforcing approvals, and maintaining audit-ready records. Risk isn’t eliminated, but it becomes visible and manageable before it escalates.

Risk and compliance in contract lifecycle management

Cost savings and value capture

Contract leakage, the value lost through missed obligations, unfavorable terms, and overlooked renewals, quietly erodes business performance across organizations of every size. Most of it is preventable with the right visibility and processes in place.

CLM software creates the conditions for better value capture. Faster cycle times accelerate revenue recognition by moving contracts from request to signature quickly. Analytics surface which terms are being negotiated away most frequently, giving teams leverage to push back before patterns become costly habits. Procurement teams benefit from automated alerts for renewals and supplier performance tracking, ensuring that obligations on both sides of the agreement are met.

According to the World Commerce and Contracting organization, improved contract development and management can increase profitability by up to 9% of a company’s annual revenue. That figure reflects the cumulative impact of faster execution, reduced penalties, and better negotiation outcomes, all of which CLM software directly enables.

Enhanced collaboration and visibility

Contracts touch Legal, procurement, sales, finance, and operations. When contract data lives in separate systems, every cross-functional decision requires manual coordination. Teams pull data independently, reconcile inconsistencies, and still end up making decisions with incomplete information.

CLM software creates a single source of truth that breaks down these silos. Shared dashboards and status tracking give every stakeholder access to the same contract information, from approval status to key dates to clause usage patterns. Legal sees what sales has committed to. Procurement monitors supplier obligations. Finance tracks payment terms and renewal exposure without waiting for a manual report.

This visibility doesn’t just improve collaboration. It speeds decision-making. When teams centralize and keep contract data current, they can answer questions instantly that once required days of data gathering. Business partners gain confidence in Legal as a strategic function rather than a bottleneck.

Scale and grow company with CLM software

Scale and growth enablement

Growing organizations face a contract volume problem. More deals, more vendors, more partnerships, and more regulatory requirements mean more contracts to manage. Manual processes don’t scale proportionally. They scale worse than linearly, adding complexity and risk with every additional agreement.

CLM software handles large contract volumes without requiring proportional increases in manual effort. Automation absorbs routine tasks like data entry, document tagging, and budget tracking. Integrations with CRM, ERP, and document management systems extend contract governance across the enterprise and ensure contract data flows directly into the systems that use it.

Teams can run real-time queries to unlock data insights across the business and bulk upload contracts without manual work. As the organization grows, the CLM infrastructure grows with it rather than against it.

CLM today: What modern software adds

CLM benefits extend beyond the classic value of centralization and automation. Artificial intelligence and machine learning are reshaping what contract management software can do, moving it from a system of record to a system of insight.

AI-powered tools now handle first-pass contract review, identifying risky or non-compliant clauses, extracting key dates and obligations, and generating a risk profile before a human reviewer opens the document. Research from Onit’s AI Center of Excellence found that AI-powered contract review using Large Language Models (LLMs) can complete reviews significantly faster than manual methods, with dramatic cost reductions compared to traditional review processes.

Beyond review, AI supports ongoing contract management through automated data extraction, compliance monitoring, and legacy contract migration. Contract data that would have required hours of manual extraction can be processed and tagged automatically, giving teams accurate metadata across their entire contract repository. Cloud-native collaboration tools allow remote teams to redline, approve, and sign without friction, making location-independent contract management a practical reality rather than an aspiration.

Making the case for CLM investment

Choosing to invest in CLM software is ultimately a decision about how a business manages one of its most critical operational assets. The benefits span teams, functions, and time horizons. Faster cycle times and reduced manual work show up immediately. Better compliance and risk management protect the organization over the longer term. Improved visibility and cross-functional collaboration compound in value as the organization grows.

Legal ops team using CLM software

For Legal operations leaders building the internal case, the strongest arguments aren’t abstract. They’re grounded in the specific pain points that slow the business down: approval delays that stall deals, missed renewals that trigger unfavorable auto-renewals, inconsistent contract language that creates disputes, and manual reporting that leaves leadership without reliable data.

CLM software addresses each of these directly. The question isn’t whether the benefits are real. It’s how much longer the organization can afford to manage contracts the way it always has.

See how OnitX CLM puts these benefits into practice

Legal operations leaders, procurement teams, and sales organizations that have outgrown manual contract processes need more than a system of record. OnitX CLM connects every stage of the contract lifecycle, from intake and review to execution, obligation tracking, and reporting, in one configurable platform built for the complexity modern organizations actually face. If any of this sounds familiar, check out how a connected CLM environment changes the way contracts get managed. Explore OnitX CLM today.

Originally published January 2022