Contract management
Contract management encompasses the full lifecycle of supplier agreements, from negotiation through execution, compliance monitoring, amendments, and renewal or termination. Effective contract management ensures that both parties honor commitments, captures the value negotiated, and maintains visibility into contractual obligations and rights.
Examples
Contract lifecycle tracking: A procurement team manages the full contract lifecycle: negotiation and execution, loading terms into contract management systems, monitoring expiration and renewal dates, tracking compliance with key provisions, and managing amendments when requirements change.
Compliance monitoring: A contract manager monitors supplier performance against contracted service levels, price protections, and delivery commitments. When performance deviates from contract terms, the manager initiates discussions and documents resolution.
Renewal management: Six months before contract expiration, the contract manager initiates renewal planning: reviewing supplier performance, assessing market conditions, determining whether to renew, renegotiate, or rebid, and executing the appropriate process in time for continuity.
Definition
Contracts represent significant negotiation investment and contain valuable provisions that mean nothing if not enforced. Yet many organizations negotiate contracts, then file them away without systematic management. This neglect forfeits contract value.
Key contract management activities include: tracking key dates (expiration, renewal windows, option exercise deadlines), monitoring performance against contracted terms, managing amendments for requirement changes, ensuring compliance with both parties' obligations, and maintaining accessible contract documentation.
Contract management systems help track large contract portfolios, providing visibility into obligations, dates, and performance across many agreements. These systems enable proactive management rather than reactive firefighting when issues arise.
Responsibility for contract management should be clearly assigned. Some organizations centralize contract management, while others assign responsibility to category managers or procurement staff who own the supplier relationship. The key is clear accountability.
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