Overview
Market Benchmarking in Gavel Exec allows you to compare a contract against recognized market standards. It surfaces terms that are off-market, missing, or weaker than what you’ve negotiated before—before negotiations even begin.Market Benchmarking is available in Gavel Exec for Web. It is not available in the Word add-in.
What It Does
Market Benchmarking analyzes clause language at the provision level and flags deviations from typical commercial positions. This includes:- Liability limitations — Is the cap in range for this deal size and sector?
- Indemnification — Are the obligations mutual, one-sided, or missing standard carve-outs?
- Termination — Do the triggers and notice periods reflect current market norms?
- Payment terms — Are net payment windows, late fees, and remedies standard?
Market Benchmarks are built into the product by Gavel’s team of lawyers.
How to Run a Market Benchmark
Upload your Contract
Upload the contract you want to review in Gavel Exec for Web. This can be a PDF, Docx, or TXT
Use Cases
Negotiate from a stronger position When off-market terms are identified early, you can enter negotiations prepared. Benchmarking gives you the data to make focused concessions and resist pushback on provisions that are clearly within market range. Flag missing clauses Benchmarking doesn’t just compare existing language—it identifies provisions that are absent from the contract altogether, such as a missing limitation of liability or omitted IP assignment clause. Calibrate by deal context Gavel’s benchmarks are segmented, so a mid-market SaaS acquisition is compared against relevant precedent—not a generic pool. This means the output is actionable, not just directional. Maintain consistency across your team When combined with Playbooks and Workspaces, benchmarking helps ensure that every lawyer on your team is applying the same standards and flagging the same issues.Benchmarking vs. Playbook Review
What is the difference between Benchmarking and a Playbook review?
What is the difference between Benchmarking and a Playbook review?
A Playbook review applies your firm’s specific requirements and preferred language to a contract—it tells you whether the contract meets your internal standards.Market Benchmarking compares the contract to external market norms and precedent—it tells you whether the terms are commercially reasonable relative to the broader market.Both features can be used together. Many teams run a Playbook review for internal compliance and then layer in Benchmarking to assess commercial risk and negotiation positioning.
Which contract types are supported?
Which contract types are supported?
Gavel’s built-in benchmarks cover a wide range of corporate transactional and commercial agreement types, including MSAs, SaaS agreements, NDAs, employment agreements, real estate leases, and M&A deal documents. Benchmarks are segmented by industry and company size where applicable.

