Most attention on a contract happens before it is signed. The contract owner is the person responsible for what happens after. Naming one for every agreement is one of the simplest ways to reduce risk and make sure contracts deliver the value they promised.
A contract owner is the person accountable for a contract throughout its life once it has been signed. They are not necessarily the person who drafted or negotiated it. Their job is to make sure the agreement is honoured, that its obligations and key dates are managed, and that the business actually gets what it agreed to.
The contract owner is responsible for the agreement after execution. They monitor performance against the contract, track obligations and deadlines, manage renewals and variations before they fall due, and act as the point of contact for any question about what was agreed. In short, they keep the contract alive and working rather than letting it sit in a drawer.
Contracts have a habit of falling between functions. The legal team writes and manages the contract, but the business runs the relationship the contract governs. When neither takes clear responsibility, the agreement is left unmanaged and the business is exposed. Naming an owner for every contract closes that gap and makes accountability explicit.
The owner is usually the person in the business closest to the relationship or project the contract governs, for example the manager who engaged the supplier or runs the service. They understand what the contract is meant to deliver and are best placed to notice when it is not. Legal supports the owner, but ownership sits with the business so that accountability is real.
An unowned contract is a quiet risk. Renewal and expiry dates pass without anyone noticing, obligations the business committed to are missed, and agreements roll over automatically on terms no one revisited. Worst of all, when the person who arranged the contract leaves, the knowledge often leaves too, and no one can even find the signed version. Keeping every agreement in a single contract repository with a named owner is what prevents this.
Plexus makes ownership and accountability part of how contracts are managed. Every agreement is stored in one searchable place with an owner assigned, obligations and key dates are tracked automatically, and reminders are sent before renewals and expiries so nothing is missed. Ownership is clear from the moment a contract is approved and signed. You can see how this works across the Plexus platform.