Last month THE PROPHET ran a RIP post for CLM over on LinkedIn where he heralded the demise of CLM.
Which is coming fast and furious for CLM 1.0 and CLM 2.0 because, as we’ve said before, most current CLM solutions are nothing more than a glorified document repository / barebones CMS with a bit of linguistic rebranding, a few customized meta-data fields, maybe a bit of versioning support, and if you’re super lucky, some integrated e-Signature support.
As for the prophet’s suggestions, most of them won’t happen.
CLM absorbed into I2O?
Considering most I2O (Intake to Orchestrate) players still haven’t absorbed a fleshed out working Source to Pay model … not likely.
CLM goes vertical?
The whole point of CLM is horizontal — to get a grip on all of your contracts, not just a subset of them!
Agentic Solutions?
I like my contracts the way I like my maps: ACCURATE!
The best “AI” can do is enhance the productivity you get from a (very) small legal team … it CAN NOT replace it!
GPOs?
Standard terms around pricing DOES NOT satisfy geographic requirements which vary on levels of regulation, compliance, etc.
Clause based?
Ask Icertis and especially Exari how well that worked out for them …
Every other suggestion
Maybe … but all of this is trickier than THE PROPHET lets on!
The reason that CLM doesn’t work, as we noted above, is that the majority of “CLM” solutions on the market are NOT CLM at all. They are glorified repositories with some authoring and e-Signature support … not at all what an organization needs.
An organization needs “lifecycle” management. That’s a heck of a lot more than just drafting, redlining, signing, and sticking in a repository. That’s because contract “lifecycle” management really starts when the contract is signed (whereas most platforms seem to think it ends when the contract is signed).
It’s about automatically extracting the obligations, indexing them, assigning them, tracking them, and making sure they get done.
It’s about extracting the milestones and deliverables, as well as those obligations, and wrapping them in a project plan, assigning the resources, assigning the supervisory chain, tracking them, making sure they get done, and making sure all requirements are met.
It’s about extracting the SKUS, price tables, rate cards, and pushing them into the Procurement systems to allow those systems to perform the right m-way matches and make sure nothing is paid out that wasn’t agreed to. It’s about pulling in the paid invoices for tracking purposes and allowing the contract/relationship managers to track total contract fulfillment.
It’s about ensuring that the right parties are notified when a contract is coming up for renewal, have all the information necessary to make the decision on termination, renegotiation, or allow an evergreen renewal.
And about a whole lot more where VALUE is concerned. Just check out what The Maverick has to say over on Spend Matters.