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NEX - The Contract Negotiation 3.0 Podcast
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NEX - The Contract Negotiation 3.0 Podcast

Author: Akorda

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NEX - The Contract Negotiation 3.0 Podcast explores the use of technology, and specifically AI, to help corporate counsel and corporate sales leaders negotiate contracts faster and with lower risk. Our guests include leaders from legal technology, sales, and general business functions. We will discuss best practices, challenges, and opportunities of modern contracting.
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In this episode, NEX host Kingsley Martin and Tim Cummins discuss:The most important legal technology changes that will happen in the next decadeThe benefits of contract lifecycle management technology platform tools and how to make the most of data-driven contracting methodsHow the European Commission (EC) is thinking about new ways to measure EC economic activity as a contract ecosystem “Ten years from now, I think we will absolutely have seen a massive increase in the standardization of contract terms. We are moving toward a world of greater clarity, of intelligibility, and we start to understand the performance and outcome impacts of our terms and conditions.” -Tim Cummins About Guest Tim Cummins, President,  IACCMTim Cummins is President of the International Association for Contract & Commercial Management and leads the Association's extensive research programs and interactions with universities and business schools. Prior to IACCM, Tim's business career included executive roles at IBM including a period on the Chairman's staff, leading studies on the impacts of globalization and the re-engineering of IBM's global contracting processes. His earlier career involved the banking, automotive and aerospace industries, initially in Corporate Finance and later in commercial and business development. He led negotiations up to $1.5 billion in value and his work has taken him to over 40 countries. Tim's writing is extensively published and he has acted in an advisory capacity to government bodies in countries that include the US, UK, Australia, Canada, and Japan, as well as regular briefings to senior managers at many of the world's largest companies. About Host Kingsley Martin, Chief Contract Scientist, AkordaKingsley Martin is Chief Contract Scientist and Co-founder of Akorda.  In this role, he guides the development of Akorda’s AI software by creating data-driven methodologies that form the basis of contract science. Kingsley regularly consults with law firms, large corporations, and governments to optimize their contacting processing. Kingsley is also the founder of KMStandards and contractstandards.com. Kingsley served as CIO at AmLaw 100 firms and held strategic planning roles at Thomson Reuters. Kingsley holds law degrees from Oxford University and Harvard Law School. 
Contract Negotiation 3.0: Legal’s Next AI Frontier with Guest Derek Schueren - CEO, AkordaDerek Schueren, CEO and Co-founder at Akorda shares his insights about using technology, and specifically AI, to help corporate counsel and corporate sales leaders negotiate contracts faster and with lower risk. Prior to Akorda, Derek was the Co-founder of Recommind, a big data analytics company where he worked with global 2000 clients, global law firms and technology partners in the areas of eDiscovery and information access.In this episode, NEX host Kingsley Martin and Derek Schueren discuss:The contract negotiation “time-lag” and resulting deal risk that inspired Derek to get into the market again with a new legal and sales technology platform solution after his last company’s exit.The “sell-side”, and “buy-side” benefits of automating contract negotiation.The productivity benefits of capturing contract negotiation data for legal and sales teams.The “hype” around what artificial intelligence can do, and how a focused product strategy to automate the most important use cases is the key to getting the most out of legal AI today.A case study of a Fortune 500 tech company using contract negotiation technology to automate their sales contract negotiation process.“We're still using 18th and 19th century tools to negotiate contracts in the 21st century. I think that actually having data at hand to drive our negotiation decisions will be critical to future success in this industry .” -Kingsley MartinGuest Derek Schueren is CEO and Co-founder at Akorda. Previously, he was Co-founder at Recommind, a big data analytics company where he worked with Global 2000 clients, global law firms, and technology partners in the areas of eDiscovery and Information Access. He is also an active investor and advisor to various start-ups with a focus on enterprise software and artificial intelligence. Derek holds a BS in Molecular Biology from Brown University and a Masters from the University of Oregon.NEX Host Kingsley Martin is Chief Contract Scientist, and Co-founder at Akorda, where he guides the development of the company’s AI software by creating data-driven methodologies that form the basis of contract science. Kingsley regularly consults with law firms, large corporations, and governments to optimize their contacting processing. Kingsley is also the founder of KMStandards and contractstandards.com. Kingsley served as CIO at AmLaw 100 firms and held strategic planning roles at Thomson Reuters. Kingsley holds law degrees from Oxford University and Harvard Law School. SHOW TRANSCRIPTKINGSLEY MARTIN: Welcome to NEX, The Contract Negotiations 3.0 Podcast. My name is Kingsley Martin and I am the Chief Contract Scientist at Akorda and your host. The NEX podcast is for corporate counsel and corporate sales leaders who need to learn all about the latest contract negotiation technology. This podcast will feature leaders from legal technology, sales and general business functions and we will discuss the best practices, challenges and opportunities of modern contracting.My guest today is Derek Scheuren, CEO and Co-founder of Akorda, where his mission is to transform how businesses contract. Prior to Akorda, he was the Co-founder of Recommind, a big data analytics company where he worked with global 2000 clients, global law firms and technology partners in the areas of eDiscovery and information access. He is also an active investor and advisor to various startups with a focus on enterprise software and artificial intelligence. Derek, welcome to the NEX podcast!DEREK SCHUEREN: Kingsley, it's great to be here. Thanks so much.KINGSLEY MARTIN: We usually like to start our show with a fun fact about our guests. Please tell us something surprising about you.DEREK SCHUEREN: Surprising! Well, a lot of people don't know I'm half Peruvian. My mother was born in Arequipa and so I've spent a lot of time in Peru. Actually, I made a pact with the Co-founder of my last company that when we exited the company, we would go and climb Machu Picchu. We recently did that, it was amazing. We took the Salkantay Trail up to Machu Picchu - it’s such an amazing place and so remarkable that even so long after construction, the walls are perfectly intact. I have always been interested in how the Inca culture was able to do something that even today, in the modern world, we have difficulty in doing.KINGSLEY MARTIN: I must admit, I didn't know that Derek, and I've known you for many years.DEREK SCHUEREN: Well, there you go. This podcast is bringing us together!KINGSLEY MARTIN: One of the most important questions I wanted to ask you is that, you've already built a successful company in the eDiscovery space, what has inspired you to take on the challenge of automating contract negotiation?DEREK SCHUEREN: That's a good question. I wake up in the morning sometimes and I ask myself this very question. I found that it was incredibly rewarding to work with my colleagues at Recommind and with the clients who really transformed an industry. It was a super exciting time. I found after our exit, I really had this desire to try and do something like that again. One of the areas that I found was the most frustrating, and one of the biggest pain points that I had during my time at Recommind was actually getting contracts done. I worked with a lot of large enterprises and large government agencies and we would negotiate very big deals - seven-figure, multi-year deals for SaaS, and for eDiscovery. When we got to contract negotiation, we had to let go of control. Prior to the contract, we would control everything from starting the call, cold calling, and all the way to getting the customer to say yes to a deal. We would then take this contract and we would give it to the customer and we would get back their red lines. We would give it to the lawyers and our staff and it was amazing because we controlled the process so tightly and then we would suddenly no longer be involved. It moved into the legal phase, and the lawyers would run with the contract and then get back to us.I always remarked about how strange that was to be in a process that you control so completely and then you just give away this process to someone else who does not have an incentive in the same way, and who may not have all the context. Sometimes we lost deals, or sometimes deals would get extended. I was very curious about this pain point.I went back to the market and I said, is this lag time something that others experience as well? As I started to talk to more people in the market, I realized that this is a pain point for every company. And it's not just sell side, it's buy side as well. Every company has pains and stories about how difficult it is to get contracts done. And what's remarkable, especially, being here in the Silicon Valley, is that it's very rare to find such a prevalent pain point horizontally, in multiple enterprises, and there is no real traction to change the process. So I thought to myself, maybe this is an area that we can provide unique value and we can really help enterprises be able to contract with one another in a better way, in a more modern way. That's why we created Akorda.KINGSLEY MARTIN: I can absolutely agree with you with respect to the challenges, as someone who started off in private legal practice and moved over to the technology and vendor side, I'm completely aware of those challenges. What are the solutions to these challenges?DEREK SCHUEREN: Well, I believe the solution starts with breaking down the siloed nature of contracts. Really creating more transparency because contracts touch everyone in the organization. You're effectively making promises on behalf of the organization, and so the ability to create more transparency is one of the key drivers. Equally, you need to also provide the tools and data to the people who are driving the contract negotiation.I find it interesting that increasingly, these legal departments and contract professionals are being asked to do more and more with the same set of resources, but they're not provided with any new technology to help them. If you look at how contract negotiation is done, it has barely evolved from the seventies. It's barely evolved from redlining fax documents. Now we redline in MS-Word and email, but it's kind of the same thing. So there's really a lack of help and support for these people that are doing all of this work.Then the third is really data capture. If you do break this out and you're able to be more transparent, you're also able to capture a lot more data than you do today. By capturing data and tracking metrics at different points in the negotiation such as approval times, you're really able to run a better shop. You're able to provide data to the executives both in legal and sales/business or procurement in order to help them get their jobs done more quickly, help them contract better with the other side, and hopefully provide better contracts so that both sides have a good long term relationship that they can build off of.KINGSLEY MARTIN: I can agree to that, these are great observations. We're still using 18th, and 19th century tools in the 21st century. I think that actually having data to drive our decisions is also going to be critical to the future. These are still serious challenges. Can you also talk about the key benefits and opportunities that come from automating contract negotiation?DEREK SCHUEREN: Absolutely. Some of the benefits if you automate contract negotiation on the sell side is that you are able to accelerate your deals. You are able to better get a handle for your contract portfolio risk. When you start to use technology to better standardize what it is that you're doing, you're really able to better serve the business and be able to better serve the counterparty in terms of the obligations that you're agreeing to. You know, Kingsley, obviously you've had quite a career in this area. You have see
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