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Which Contracts Actually Matter?

Written By: Aryeh Da Costa

Introduction 

Most SMEs don’t struggle because they have “too many” contracts.
They struggle because they treat all contracts equally – even though most contracts have little impact, and a small handful determine: 

  • Cost 
  • Risk 
  • Service stability 
  • Supplier dependency 
  • Cash flow 
  • Customer outcomes 

CIPS recommends that organisations apply Pareto principles to supplier and contract management because 20% of suppliers typically make up 80% of total spend.

This means: 

Not all contracts matter.
But some matter a lot. 

Why SMEs fall into the “equal attention trap”

SMEs often have: 

  • Limited admin capacity 
  • Fast-moving priorities 
  • No formal contract owner 
  • No segmentation of contract importance 

So they end up giving the same level of attention to: 

  • A small office services contract 
  • A major supplier agreement 
  • A low-value SaaS subscription 
  • A revenue-critical customer contract 

In reality, these contracts carry vastly different impacts. 

The three types of contracts that matter most

High-value supplier contracts 

These influence: 

  • Cost of goods 
  • Service continuity 
  • Operational stability 
  • Vendor dependency 
  • Working capital 

Revenue-Generating Customer Agreements 

These determine: 

  • Cash flow 
  • Revenue predictability 
  • Renewal cycles 
  • Client performance obligations 

Contracts with renewal or termination risk 

These carry the highest chance of “value leakage.” 

These are the agreements SMEs should elevate, track closely, and treat as priority. 

The Framework SMEs Use to Prioritise Effectively 

Step 1 – Categorise all contracts by value and risk 

Value = cost or revenue impact 
Risk = operational or compliance exposure

Step 2 – Identify top 20% by spend or revenue 

Using the CIPS Pareto guidance.

Step 3 – Flag contracts with upcoming renewals 

These require immediate attention.

Step 4 – Assign ownership 

Every priority contract needs a clearly responsible person.

Step 5 – Automate alerts on these contracts first 

Simple, predictable, actionable. 

Why Prioritisation Changes Everything 

When SMEs stop treating all contracts equally: 

  • The important contracts get proper oversight 
  • Renewal and pricing decisions improve 
  • Risk reduces instantly 
  • Less time is wasted on low-value agreements 
  • The team becomes proactive rather than reactive 

You don’t need to overhaul contract management. 
You just need to focus on what matters most. 

Conclusion

SMEs often feel overwhelmed by the number of contracts they manage, but the real challenge is not volume. It is prioritisation. When businesses identify the agreements that drive the greatest financial and operational impact, they can focus their time and oversight where it matters most. By categorising contracts by value and risk, highlighting the top spend or revenue agreements, and ensuring clear ownership with automated alerts, SMEs create a more focused and effective contract management approach. Instead of spreading attention thinly across every document, teams concentrate on the agreements that truly influence business performance.