Lease review, minus the hour of cross-referencing
For a law firm — reviewing commercial leases clause by clause before anything goes for sign-off.
A 40-page commercial lease comes in. The associate reads every clause, cross-references the firm's checklist from memory, flags anything that looks off — an unusual break-clause notice, a repair obligation pushed onto the tenant, an indemnity outside the firm's usual range — then writes it up and drafts an email asking for sign-off. An hour or more per lease, most of it spent confirming things that turn out to be standard.
One way it plays out
- The lease gets reviewed against your firm's own checklist, clause by clause — flagging not just what's there, but what deviates from your norms, and why.
- The findings get checked before a person sees them — a second pass verifies every flag actually traces back to real language in the lease; anything asserted without support gets pulled or softened, so nobody's chasing a phantom issue.
- You get a structured report plus a draft email — each flagged clause, its risk level, and the exact text it's based on — and a draft note to the approver summarizing it, ready for the associate to edit and send.
That's one way it plays out — the checklist, the risk thresholds, and the report format get shaped around how your firm reviews.
So the associate opens a lease that's already flagged down to the handful of clauses that matter, with the source text attached — and spends their hour on judgment, not on cross-referencing. Every call still needs a lawyer; the tool just clears the manual work that used to come before it.
Works for: law firms, commercial lease review, and internal compliance checklists.
Everything stays on servers here in Canada, and once it's built the whole thing is yours to keep — not a subscription, and not tied to anyone's platform. I'm here in Winnipeg: I set it up, and I stay with you and your team until it's running the way you want.
Curious how it's built? Technical breakdown available on request.