Forget the manual work of file systems and spreadsheets.
Let Nomio build, validate, and maintain a searchable contract repository you can trust.
Trusted by Lean Legal and procurement teams
Ryan Robinson
Legal Director, Nexus
Watch case studyJames Russell-Jones
General Counsel, Bark
Watch case studyTom Plowman
General Counsel, Technetix
Read case studyMeghan Pretorius
Legal Manager, Mark Anthony
Watch case studyHours lost entering contract details into spreadsheets.
Different data entry standards lead to out-of-date, inconsistent, and inaccurate data.
Every minute spent CTRL+F’ing is time wasted doing admin instead of higher-value work.
We do the document organisation and data capture, now and forever.
Verify any data point by clicking it – you’ll go straight to where it’s defined in the contract.
Search by contract type, clause, counterparty, or keyword, and get what you’re looking for in seconds.
Drag-and-Drop Contract Management
Every time you upload new contracts, we’ll organise them, capture key terms, flag missing documents, and add them to your contract repository.
Reliable Contract Repository
We capture anything you care about in a contract — key dates, renewal terms, payment structures, and more — and give you intuitive tools to filter, search, and export it.
Fully Searchable
The ultimate CTRL + F replacement. Nomio lets you search across every clause in all your contracts at once. Click any clause to go straight to it, right in the contract.
Step 1
Connect your Docusign or send a shared drive link and we’ll process an initial batch of your contracts.
Step 1
We align and tailor our approach to your business needs, building an internal blueprint for your account.
Step 2
We group contracts, capture and calculate key information, flag missing data & build your repository.
Tom Plowman
General Counsel, Technetix
Read case studyEmilie Franklin
Senior Legal Counsel, Modaxo
Watch case studyLauren Eaton
Director of Project Management, LendInvest
Watch case studyHattie Langley
Legal Counsel, Livingbridge
Watch case study