
Tonkean, the first-of-its-kind process and agentic orchestration platform, recently announced Tonkean Contracts Hub, an AI-native contract orchestration solutions for enterprise procurement and legal teams that leverages Tonkean AI agents to modernize the entire contract lifecycle—from request and review through post-signature obligations.
Contracts—and the obligations they contain—are central to how organizations manage risk, cost, and relationships. But the means by which most enterprise procurement and legal teams manage contracts hasn’t kept pace with how work actually happens internally.
Traditional CLMs move documents through approval. They store contracts. But they don’t offer much in the way of flexibility, interoperability, or post-signature governance—of helping ensure a contract's terms and obligations are honored downstream. Contracts get signed, but then they get siloed—and the obligations stipulated in them are not reliably enforced, tracked, or operationalized.
Tonkean Contracts Hub changes that—and in the process takes contract management into the agentic era.
For procurement teams that need contracts to move faster and who want to better govern spend and suppliers, Tonkean Contracts Hub connects contract workflows directly to purchasing execution. Unlike traditional CLMs that stop at signature and leave enforcement to downstream tools and manual effort, Tonkean streamlines contract intake, drafting, and approvals while transforming negotiated terms—pricing, rate cards, renewals, and obligations—into enforceable controls across ERP, P2P, invoicing, and supplier systems.
Want to learn more about this major new release for enterprise procurement? Join Matt Aaronson, Tonkean’s Sr. Director of Product Marketing, Tonkean, Sven Blawatt, Tonkean’s Sr. Procurement Transformation Architect, and Mike Pierson, Tonkean's Director of Sales Engineering, for an in-depth demonstration and overview.
You’ll walk away with an understanding of precisely how this revolutionary new step forward in procurement and agentic orchestration works, how to get started, and what its arrival heralds for the future of procurement as a function.