Use Cases

For the in-house attorneys who know where the risk is buried.

Three roles in your legal function, three different ways a missed clause costs you. Contraqly addresses each one directly — before the deadline passes.

Professional legal office environment representing a General Counsel reviewing contracts
General Counsel

You manage 800 contracts. How many are renewing this quarter — and which ones have non-standard notice requirements?

A General Counsel at a mid-size professional services firm overseeing 800+ vendor and client agreements. One renewal went through on autopilot: a 120-day auto-renewal clause with a 2-year lock-in, buried in an exhibit. The invoice arrived before anyone on the legal team knew the window had closed. $180,000 in committed spend that could have been renegotiated or terminated with proper notice.

Contraqly surfaces every upcoming renewal date, termination notice deadline, and contract expiry across your entire repository — organized by urgency and flagged by deviation severity, 90 days before the window closes. Not when the invoice arrives.

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Legal operations workspace with contract files and a laptop
Legal Operations Manager

Your job is to make the legal function faster. Contraqly is your clause radar.

A Legal Operations Manager at a technology company, responsible for vendor contract governance across 600 active agreements. A liability cap of $50,000 was buried in Exhibit C of a software license — against a contract value of $2.4M. Standard market position for that contract type is 12 months of fees, approximately $200,000. The deviation wasn't identified until renewal negotiation began, two years into the agreement. By then, the counterparty's posture had already been set.

Contraqly scores every liability cap deviation against market-standard positions at ingestion. High-severity deviations surface immediately — not at the next quarterly contract review. Your team sees the asymmetric risk exposure before it becomes a negotiating disadvantage.

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Abstract M&A deal room atmosphere with document stacks
M&A Team

Change-of-control clauses shouldn't surface in due diligence. They should surface before the LOI is signed.

An M&A team acquired a target company and discovered a change-of-control provision in a critical vendor agreement three weeks after LOI signing. The counterparty had both termination rights and repricing rights on any ownership change exceeding 25%. Obtaining consent required two weeks of deal time, a commercial concession, and an amendment that reset pricing to current market rates. The information existed in a PDF on a shared drive. No one had read it during deal preparation.

Contraqly scans your target's contract repository — and your own — for every change-of-control trigger, assignment restriction, and consent requirement before any transaction process begins. Your deal counsel works from a complete picture, not a discovery list built under time pressure.

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