Contracts are one of the most important sources of truth in third-party risk management. They define insurance requirements, coverage limits, and documentation obligations — but turning that language into enforceable requirements is still largely manual work.
We’re changing that.
In an upcoming release, you’ll be able to upload a contract directly into the platform and let the system handle the heavy lifting.
Behind the scenes, the platform will:
Identify insurance-related provisions within the contract
Translate them into structured, ready-to-use requirements
Prepare those requirements for assignment to the appropriate third party
Initiate document collection once you’ve reviewed and confirmed
You upload the contract. The system does the analysis. You stay in control.
Why This Matters
Today, many teams spend hours:
Reading contracts line by line
Interpreting coverage language
Rebuilding requirements manually
Assigning them and troubleshooting mismatches later
That isn’t strategic risk management — it’s administrative overhead.
This new capability is designed to remove those manual steps while keeping accountability exactly where it belongs: with you.
Fewer setup steps. Less rework. Faster time from contract to compliance.
Built for Real-World Contracts — With Oversight at Every Step
Contracts aren’t clean templates. They contain variations in phrasing, layered conditions, and industry-specific nuance.
We’re designing this experience to handle real-world language from day one — including edge cases and complex scenarios — so it works the way you expect it to.
Just as important, nothing happens without visibility.
Before any requirement is enforced:
You can review what was identified
Make adjustments where needed
Confirm the final outcome
Automation should reduce effort — not reduce control.
This is an early step toward a more streamlined, AI-driven future where manual configuration fades away and risk workflows feel faster, more intuitive, and easier to manage.
Upload the contract.
Let the platform do the work.
Focus on decisions, not data entry.