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Not finding what you are looking for? Feel free to reach out and we are happy to help.
Signed contracts are often considered “done.” They run, serve their purpose, and fade into day-to-day operations. That is precisely where the risk lies. Many contracts do not simply expire - they renew automatically, change terms, orcreate ongoing obligations without anyone actively noticing.
Such cases usually become visible only when it is already too late: an automatic renewal takes effect or a termination deadline is missed. From a legal perspective, the situation is often clear. From an organizational perspective, however, the question is why no one had the critical date on their radar.
In many companies, deadline management is treated as an administrative task. Termination periods, renewal options, or adjustment mechanisms may be contractually defined, but they are rarely monitored systematically. Instead, organizations rely on manual solutions and individual knowledge. Typical situations include:
As long ascontract volumes remain manageable, this model works. As the number of contracts increases, it becomes unmanageable.
Missed deadlines are often interpreted internally as personal failures. In reality, they are almost always structural issues. Deadlines are contract data and inmany organizations, contract data is not systematically captured, maintained, or analyzed. Yet deadlines are not only legally relevant. They have direct financial implications. Automatic renewals, missed adjustment rights, or unused termination options lead to costs that are often not transparent in budgets.
Another weak point is the lack of overview. When management asks which contracts will expire or become critical in the coming months, the answer often requires significant manual effort. This turns deadline management into a reactive activity rather than a steering instrument. Risks are addressed only once they have already materialized - not at the point where they could still be shaped.
Reliable deadline management requires a clear definition of which deadlines matter, who monitors them, and what actions they are meant to trigger. Not every deadline requires the same level of attention, and not every renewal requires the same decision. Only once this logic is established does Contract Lifecycle Management make sense. CLM enables the structured capture of deadlines, the assignment of responsibilities, and the timely creation of transparency. It does not replace decision-making, but it ensures that decisions can be made intime.
Surprising contract renewals are rarely surprising. They are the result of missing structure in deadline management. Anyone looking to keep contract risks and costs under control must treat deadlines as steering-relevant data - not as a footnote in the contract. Technology can help. The foundation remains a clearly defined process.
Which stage of the contract lifecycle do you want to optimize first? Drafting? Reviewing? Approving? Managing obligations?
Why choose one when you can have all the ingredients for success?
With Knowliah and Legal Twin Contract Insights, you get the perfect blend:
Mix them together, and you don’t just manage contracts - you turn them into a strategic advantage.