The Procurement Glossary » Redlining
Redlining
Contracts & Legal
Definition
The process of marking up proposed changes to a contract during negotiation, showing edits both parties can review.
Explanation
Redlining tracks who changed what, keeping negotiation transparent and auditable. Modern CLM tools handle redlines digitally, comparing versions and speeding agreement while preserving a record of concessions.
Example
After three rounds of redlining, the parties settle the liability cap and sign.
Related terms
- Clause Library — A repository of pre-approved standard contract clauses that legal and procurement teams reuse when drafting agreements.
- Contract Lifecycle Management (CLM) — The end-to-end management of contracts using software — authoring, negotiation, approval, execution, storage and renewal.
- Negotiation — The discussion between buyer and supplier to agree price, terms and conditions before a contract or order is placed.
- Electronic Signature (e-Signature) — A legally recognised digital method of signing a document, replacing a handwritten signature.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Redlining?
The process of marking up proposed changes to a contract during negotiation, showing edits both parties can review. Redlining tracks who changed what, keeping negotiation transparent and auditable. Modern CLM tools handle redlines digitally, comparing versions and speeding agreement while preserving a record of concessions.
Can you give an example of Redlining?
After three rounds of redlining, the parties settle the liability cap and sign.
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