The Clment Playbook

The built-in, type-tailored review standard you get for free when you don't bring your own playbook — a proper review for that kind of contract, not a generic pass.

Updated 3 Jul 2026

When you run a review without selecting one of your own playbooks, Clment doesn’t fall back to a bland, one-size-fits-all pass. If your contract is a recognised type, it’s reviewed against the Clment Playbook for that type — our own review standard, tailored to what actually matters for that kind of contract.

You’ll see it named on the review setup screen — e.g. “Clment Playbook — Employment Agreement” — where the “No playbook” option used to be.

Why it’s better than a generic review

A generic AI pass reads the contract well but treats every document the same. The Clment Playbook knows the difference between contract types:

  • A services agreement gets scrutiny on scope, deliverables, acceptance and termination-for-convenience.
  • An NDA gets scrutiny on definition of confidential information, term, and permitted disclosures.
  • A lease gets scrutiny on rent review, repair obligations and break rights.

It’s also tuned to the governing law in play — so a UK-governed contract is reviewed with a UK lens, not a generic international one — and it reflects the negotiating posture and side you’ve chosen for the review.

The result is sharper, more relevant findings: the things a specialist would look for in this contract, flagged the way they’d flag them.

You get it with zero setup

There’s nothing to build. Upload a contract, run a review, and — as long as the contract is classified to a known type — the Clment Playbook is already selected for you. It’s included; you don’t author it and you don’t maintain it — Clment does that, and keeps it current.

You can still add review instructions for a specific run on top of it — “focus on liability and indemnity” or “this is a renewal, flag anything that changed” — the same way you would with any playbook.

When you’ll see “No playbook” instead

The Clment Playbook needs to know what kind of contract it’s looking at. If a document can’t be confidently classified to a known contract type — or it isn’t really a contract — the option stays as plain “No playbook” and the review runs on the general engine. Everything still works; it just can’t tailor to a type it can’t name.

Should I still write my own playbook?

The Clment Playbook is an excellent default and, for many contracts, all you need. Write your own playbook when you want the review to enforce your house position — your specific liability caps, your standard wording, the variations you don’t care about, the deal-breakers you never accept. Your playbook captures preferences that are unique to your team; the Clment Playbook captures what’s standard for the contract type.

When you select one of your own playbooks, that’s what the review uses — your playbook stands on its own and the Clment Playbook steps aside for that run.

See also

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