When followed consistently, they reduce risk, speed up approvals, lower external legal spend, and turn contract management from a bottleneck into a business enabler. This guide covers the essential practices every enterprise legal team should implement, and how modern contract management software supports each one.
Contracts define, control, and protect the majority of enterprise value. Yet in most organisations, contract processes are fragmented, manual, and slow. The consequences are real: missed renewal deadlines, compliance breaches, costly disputes, and a legal team permanently stuck in reactive mode.
Effective contract management changes this. When done well, it delivers:
• Faster deal execution and time-to-signature
• Reduced risk of missed obligations or compliance failures
• Lower reliance on external counsel for routine work
• Greater visibility and accountability across the contract lifecycle
• A legal team that operates as a strategic partner, not a bottleneck
Best practices in contract management are structured around the stages of the contract lifecycle. Understanding each stage helps legal teams identify where delays, errors, and risk are most likely to occur.
1. Contract preparation
The contract lifecycle begins with identifying the need for an agreement, selecting the appropriate parties, and establishing the scope and terms. Using pre-approved templates at this stage dramatically reduces drafting time and ensures legal consistency from the outset.
2. Negotiation and redlining
Once a draft is in play, both parties negotiate terms. Real-time redlining tools allow stakeholders to track every change, suggest modifications, and reach agreement faster. Clear version control ensures all parties are always working from the most current document.
3. Execution
Digital execution via e-signature replaces the delays of paper-based, wet-ink processes. Once signed, contracts should be automatically stored in a centralised repository and obligations tracked from day one.
4. Performance monitoring
Actively tracking delivery timelines, quality standards, and compliance requirements throughout a contract's life prevents surprises. Automated alerts for key milestones keep all parties accountable.
5. Renewal or termination
Contracts rarely manage themselves at expiry. Automated reminders, lead-time planning, and clear ownership of renewal decisions ensure contracts are reviewed and actioned well before critical deadlines.
The following best practices reflect what high-performing in-house legal teams consistently get right. Each one is applicable whether you are implementing contract management from scratch or optimising an existing process.
Standardise contract creation with templates
Standardised, pre-approved templates are the single most effective way to reduce drafting time and legal risk. They allow business users to self-serve on routine agreements (NDAs, service agreements, supplier contracts) without needing to engage the legal team directly for every request. This frees lawyers to focus on complex, high-value work. Templates should be reviewed and updated regularly to reflect changes in law, regulatory requirements, or business practice.
Create a centralised contract repository
A centralised contract repository is the foundation of effective contract management. All signed agreements should be stored in a single, searchable location with consistent naming conventions, metadata tagging, and access controls. This eliminates the risk of contracts being lost in email threads or personal drives, and gives the legal team instant visibility into obligations, renewals, and counterparty relationships.
Implement e-signature
E-signature is now standard practice in enterprise contract management. It eliminates the delays, costs, and administrative burden of paper-based execution, while providing a legally binding, auditable trail of every signing event. Contracts that once took days to execute can be completed in minutes.
Define clear approval workflows and delegations of authority
Approval bottlenecks are one of the most common sources of contract delay. Clearly defined approval workflows, supported by a documented delegation of authority matrix, ensure that the right person approves the right contract, at the right value threshold. Contract management software can automate these workflows, routing agreements based on contract type, value, and risk profile without manual chasing.
Monitor expiry dates and key milestones
A contract that auto-renews on unfavourable terms, or lapses without a renewal decision, represents a failure of contract management. Automated alerts for critical dates (renewal windows, notice periods, performance milestones, compliance deadlines) ensure nothing slips through. The best practice is to start renewal reviews well in advance of the contractual deadline, allowing time to renegotiate or transition if needed.
Monitor compliance and manage risk proactively
Compliance monitoring cannot be left to periodic reviews. Contract obligations, including reporting requirements, price escalation clauses, exclusivity provisions, and regulatory commitments, need ongoing tracking. AI-assisted contract review tools can identify non-compliant language before execution, and automated compliance checks against applicable laws and regulations significantly reduce the risk of a breach going undetected.
Measure performance with KPIs
What gets measured gets managed. In-house legal teams that track contract management KPIs are better positioned to identify process inefficiencies, make the case for investment, and demonstrate the strategic value of the legal function. Key metrics to track include contract cycle time, compliance rate, renewal rate, and cost savings generated through improved negotiation.
The following KPIs provide a comprehensive view of contract management performance:
• Contract cycle time: the time from initiation to execution. Plexus customers typically see a 45% reduction in contract turnaround time after implementing automated workflows.
• Contract compliance rate: the proportion of contracts meeting all obligations and regulatory requirements throughout their lifecycle.
• Contract value: the revenue generated or cost savings achieved through effective contract negotiation and management.
• Renewal rate: the percentage of contracts successfully renewed, reflecting the health of counterparty relationships and renewal process management.
• Contract risk exposure: a measure of the financial, legal, and reputational risk across the active contract portfolio.
• Legal self-service rate: the proportion of contracts completed by business users without direct legal team involvement, enabled by templates and automation.
Contract management software does not replace the judgement of a skilled in-house lawyer. What it does is eliminate the administrative burden that prevents that judgement from being applied where it matters most. The right platform handles the operational layer: routing approvals, storing documents, tracking deadlines, and surfacing risk signals automatically.
Plexus brings together contract creation, redlining, e-signature, obligation tracking, and compliance monitoring in a single platform. Rather than managing contracts across disconnected tools and inboxes, legal teams have one source of truth for every agreement. Business users can self-serve on routine contracts using approved templates, with legal maintaining full oversight and control.
The outcome: in-house legal teams using Plexus report a 65% increase in legal productivity, a 45% reduction in contract turnaround time, and significantly reduced external counsel spend.
The biggest risk in contract management is not a single missed deadline or a poorly negotiated clause. It is the cumulative cost of a system that was never designed to scale. Manual processes, fragmented tools, and undefined workflows create a growing gap between legal demand and legal capacity.
Implementing contract management best practices closes that gap. Start with the fundamentals: standardised templates, a centralised repository, and clearly defined approval workflows. Layer in automation for compliance monitoring, deadline alerts, and performance measurement. Over time, the legal team shifts from managing contracts reactively to governing them strategically.
Plexus is built to support every stage of this journey. To see how it works in practice, speak with a member of our team.