Your legal team reviews contracts in 19 days. Your competitors do it in 3.
Sales closes the deal on Monday. Legal gets the contract on Tuesday. Three weeks later, the contract is still in review. The customer's champion has gone cold. The deal is at risk. And everyone blames Legal.
This isn't a people problem. It's a throughput problem — and it's costing more than you think.
The 19-day problem
The average contract review cycle takes 19 days from submission to signature. Not because lawyers are slow — because they're buried.
A typical in-house counsel spends 3.2 hours per contract on review. That sounds manageable until you do the math: a mid-market legal team handling 500 contracts per year spends 1,600 hours — roughly 200 full working days — just on review. That's one full-time attorney doing nothing but reading redlines for an entire year.
And those 19 days aren't 19 days of focused review. They're 2 days of actual legal work buried inside 17 days of queuing, handoffs, clarification emails, and waiting for the right person to be available.
Why it's not your team's fault
Volume is growing, headcount is not
83% of General Counsel expect contract volume to increase over the next two years. Almost none expect proportional headcount increases. The math doesn't work: more contracts, same team, longer queues.
Every contract feels unique
NDAs with non-standard non-solicit clauses. Vendor agreements with hidden liability caps. Customer contracts with bespoke IP assignment language. Even “standard” contracts arrive with enough variation that a lawyer has to read every clause.
No triage system
A $5M enterprise agreement and a routine NDA hit the same inbox with the same priority. Without a triage layer, everything is urgent and nothing gets fast-tracked.
The real cost
Contract delays aren't just an inconvenience — they're a revenue problem. Industry estimates put the cost of contract friction at roughly 10% of annual revenue for enterprises, driven by delayed deals, missed renewal windows, and unfavorable terms accepted under time pressure.
Sales blames Legal
When a deal stalls for three weeks in legal review, Sales doesn't see a thorough risk assessment. They see a bottleneck. The relationship between the two departments erodes, and Legal gets cut out of deals earlier — which creates more risk, not less.
Legal knows it
90% of legal teams report feeling that they slow down the business. That's not a morale statistic — it's a signal that the operating model is broken. Legal wants to move faster. They just can't with current tools and volume.
3 approaches that work
1. Playbook templates and clause libraries
How it works: Pre-approve standard positions for common clause types (indemnification, limitation of liability, IP ownership). Build a playbook that lets junior counsel or contract managers handle 60-70% of reviews without escalation.
Impact: Reduces review time for standard contracts from days to hours. Frees senior counsel for complex negotiations.
Limitation: Only works for contracts that match your templates. Non-standard agreements still require full review.
2. Contract Lifecycle Management (CLM) tools
How it works: Platforms like Ironclad, Agiloft, or DocuSign CLM centralize intake, automate routing, track status, and enforce approval workflows. Contracts move through a defined pipeline instead of sitting in email.
Impact: Cuts cycle time by 30-50% through better workflow. Gives Legal visibility into their own queue.
Limitation: 6-12 month implementation. $50-200K+/year. Requires change management across Sales, Procurement, and Legal.
3. AI-assisted clause-by-clause review
How it works: AI reads the contract against your playbook, flags deviations clause-by-clause, scores risk, and generates a redline with recommended positions. The lawyer reviews the AI's output instead of reading the raw contract.
Impact: Cuts review time from 3.2 hours to under 30 minutes for standard contracts. Non-standard contracts still get flagged for human review — but with a pre-analyzed summary.
Best for: Teams that need speed now, without a 6-month platform implementation.
What this means for your team
The 19-day cycle isn't inevitable. Teams that combine a solid playbook with AI-assisted review are hitting 2-3 day turnarounds — not by cutting corners, but by letting lawyers focus on judgment calls instead of reading boilerplate.
The bottleneck isn't your legal team. It's the operating model. Fix the model, and the speed follows.
Sources
- 1World Commerce & Contracting: average contract review cycle is 19 days
- 2EY Law Survey: in-house counsel spend 3.2 hours per contract on average
- 3Deloitte Legal Operations: 83% of GCs expect contract volume to increase
- 4CLOC: contract delays cost enterprises an estimated 10% of annual revenue
- 5ACC Chief Legal Officers Survey: 90% of legal teams feel they slow down the business