-
World record-holders Walsh, Smith grab wins at US Open
-
Ukraine, US to meet for third day, agree 'real progress' depends on Russia
-
Double wicket strike as New Zealand eye victory over West Indies
-
Peace medal and YMCA: Trump steals the show at World Cup draw
-
NBA legend Jordan in court as NASCAR anti-trust case begins
-
How coaches reacted to 2026 World Cup draw
-
Glasgow down Sale as Stomers win at Bayonne in Champions Cup
-
Trump takes aim at Europe in new security strategy
-
Witness in South Africa justice-system crimes probe shot dead
-
Tuchel urges England not to get carried away plotting route to World Cup glory
-
Russian ambassador slams EU frozen assets plan for Ukraine
-
2026 World Cup draw is kind to favorites as Trump takes limelight
-
WHO chief upbeat on missing piece of pandemic treaty
-
US vaccine panel upends hepatitis B advice in latest Trump-era shift
-
Ancelotti says Brazil have 'difficult' World Cup group with Morocco
-
Kriecmayr wins weather-disrupted Beaver Creek super-G
-
Ghostwriters, polo shirts, and the fall of a landmark pesticide study
-
Mixed day for global stocks as market digest huge Netflix deal
-
Fighting erupts in DR Congo a day after peace deal signed
-
England boss Tuchel wary of 'surprise' in World Cup draw
-
10 university students die in Peru restaurant fire
-
'Sinners' tops Critics Choice nominations
-
Netflix's Warner Bros. acquisition sparks backlash
-
France probes mystery drone flight over nuclear sub base
-
Frank Gehry: five key works
-
US Supreme Court to weigh Trump bid to end birthright citizenship
-
Frank Gehry, master architect with a flair for drama, dead at 96
-
'It doesn't make sense': Trump wants to rename American football
-
A day after peace accord signed, shelling forces DRC locals to flee
-
Draw for 2026 World Cup kind to favorites as Trump takes center stage
-
Netflix to buy Warner Bros. in deal of the decade
-
US sanctions equate us with drug traffickers: ICC dep. prosecutor
-
Migration and crime fears loom over Chile's presidential runoff
-
French officer charged after police fracture woman's skull
-
Fresh data show US consumers still strained by inflation
-
Eurovision reels from boycotts over Israel
-
Trump takes centre stage as 2026 World Cup draw takes place
-
Trump all smiles as he wins FIFA's new peace prize
-
US panel votes to end recommending all newborns receive hepatitis B vaccine
-
Title favourite Norris reflects on 'positive' Abu Dhabi practice
-
Stocks consolidate as US inflation worries undermine Fed rate hopes
-
Volcanic eruptions may have brought Black Death to Europe
-
Arsenal the ultimate test for in-form Villa, says Emery
-
Emotions high, hope alive after Nigerian school abduction
-
Another original Hermes Birkin bag sells for $2.86 mn
-
11 million flock to Notre-Dame in year since rising from devastating fire
-
Gymnast Nemour lifts lid on 'humiliation, tears' on way to Olympic gold
-
Lebanon president says country does not want war with Israel
-
France takes anti-drone measures after flight over nuclear sub base
-
Signing up to DR Congo peace is one thing, delivery another
Vallor Survey Finds Contract Visibility Gap Costing Enterprises Billions
Data shows procurement still flying blind on terms and obligations, eroding revenue and delaying deals, despite surging interest in AI-powered contract intelligence.
NEW YORK CITY, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 4, 2025 / Vallor, the AI-agent platform that puts procurement contracts on autopilot, today released From Manual Chaos to AI Opportunity: The State of Contract Management in 2025, exposing how manual processes and scattered access to agreements are draining value and heightening risk across the enterprise. While leaders overwhelmingly rank contract visibility and automation as critical priorities for the year ahead, most still operate in the dark, leaving money on the table and compliance in jeopardy.
According to the survey of 120 procurement and legal professionals at mid-market and enterprise organizations, the disconnect is widening:
Visibility is fractured. Only 48% report clear, centralized access to contracts; the rest rely on shared drives, email chains, or scattered tools that conceal obligations and deadlines.
Manual work persists. Roughly 59% still manage review and redlining by hand; 46% track renewals manually; and 44% generate reports without automation, slowing deals and burying teams in busywork.
Value slips through the cracks. Nearly 1 in 3 respondents admit to missing rebates, discounts, or obligations because agreements were inaccessible or poorly tracked.
External benchmarks underscore the stakes. Independent analyses estimate poor contract management can erode 8-9% of annual revenue, with global losses at nearly $2 trillion each year due to inefficiency and weak oversight.
"Contracts are the operating system of procurement, yet they're still treated like static PDFs," said Antonio, CEO of Vallor. "When teams can't see terms and obligations, they can't enforce them. This survey shows the cost isn't theoretical. Organizations are missing savings, delaying deals, and inviting compliance exposure. It's time to turn contracts into living assets that are searchable, actionable, and continuously monitored."
The Economic Cost of Inaction
The impact is measurable across three pressure points:
Deal velocity: More than half of respondents say it takes 30 minutes to 2 hours to locate and validate a single clause, delaying execution and supplier onboarding.
Savings realization: Missed incentives and unclaimed rebates compound across portfolios, shrinking negotiated value.
Compliance exposure: As regulatory volume climbs (with a record number of pages published in the Federal Register in 2024), buried obligations-from data privacy to environmental clauses-become ticking risks.
AI Adoption Moves from Curiosity to Imperative
Leaders see AI as the inflection point. Roughly 20% report extensive use already, 34% are piloting, and 33% are actively exploring. Top confidence builders include secure integrations with existing systems, demonstrable ROI, and endorsement from legal and compliance. The direction of travel is unmistakable: 80% of respondents rank improving contract visibility and automation as "important" or "critical" in the next 12 months.
"The winners will move first," Antonio added. "AI-powered contract intelligence doesn't just reduce manual toil. It closes the visibility gap that quietly erodes revenue and resilience. Those who adopt now will outpace peers on cost, compliance, and supplier performance."
From Manual Chaos to AI Opportunity: The State of Contract Management in 2025 is available now or book a demo here: https://vallor.ai/book-a-demo.
ABOUT VALLOR:
Vallor is pioneering a new era of contract automation, purpose-built for enterprise procurement teams. Built on deep domain expertise and an AI-first foundation, Vallor puts contracts on autopilot-deploying AI agents to manage the entire contract management process. As an emerging solution in Service-as-Software, Vallor goes beyond traditional SaaS by embedding AI that actively executes tasks-not just supporting them-unlocking entirely new levels of productivity and value across the supplier lifecycle. To learn more, visit https://vallor.ai
MEDIA CONTACT:
Lauren Gill, MAG PR at E: [email protected]; P: 978-473-1362
# # #
SOURCE: Vallor
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
P.A.Mendoza--AT