Contract drafting with AI: where legal teams should start
AI drafting works best when it starts from your own templates, clause library, and intake facts. Here is how to design a drafting workflow that lawyers can trust.
The best AI contract drafting workflows do not begin with a blank prompt. They begin with the materials your firm already trusts: approved templates, clause libraries, negotiation notes, and the factual intake that defines the matter.
When those inputs are structured, AI can produce a useful first draft without forcing a lawyer to rewrite from scratch. The lawyer still controls the judgment calls. The system simply removes the slow assembly work that happens before legal review can begin.
Start with repeatable documents
Drafting automation is strongest for documents that follow a recognisable pattern: NDAs, engagement letters, standard service agreements, board consents, employment documents, and routine commercial contracts. These matters need accuracy, consistency, and speed more than bespoke invention.
For each document type, define the required intake facts, optional clauses, approval rules, and fallback positions. This turns drafting from a memory exercise into a workflow the whole team can follow.
Keep assumptions visible
A good AI draft should not hide uncertainty. If a payment term is missing, a governing law choice is unclear, or an unusual limitation of liability is requested, the workflow should surface that as an assumption or open question.
This is the difference between useful drafting assistance and risky automation. Lawyers need a draft, but they also need to know what the draft is relying on.
Measure review time, not word count
The goal is not to generate the longest or most complete document. The goal is to reduce the time between intake and lawyer-ready review. If the first draft lets a lawyer move directly to judgment calls, the workflow is working.