Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
FY 2025 (ended Jan 31, 2025): Revenue $2.977B (+8% YoY); 1.7M customers in 180 countries; 1B+ users; 1,131 customers with $300K+ ACV (up from 1,060 in 2024)
DocuSign CLM is the contract lifecycle management platform from DocuSign, the San Francisco-based agreement cloud company founded in 2003. While DocuSign's eSignature product revolutionized document execution, CLM addresses the broader contract management lifecycle — authoring, negotiation, approval workflows, obligation tracking, and renewal management — giving legal, sales, and procurement teams a unified system for every stage of a contract from first draft to renewal. The platform's core technology uses AI to extract, classify, and surface contract metadata from both executed agreements and legacy documents.\n\nDocuSign CLM serves enterprise customers in financial services, life sciences, technology, and professional services who manage high volumes of complex contracts with multiple counterparties and jurisdictions. Key differentiators include deep integration with DocuSign eSignature, Salesforce, and major ERP systems, enabling contracts to flow automatically through CRM and procurement workflows. The Intelligent Agreement Management layer — powered by DocuSign AI — adds risk flagging, obligation extraction, and clause recommendations that reduce legal review time and surface buried contract risks.\n\nDocuSign reported FY2025 revenue of $2.977 billion, an 8% year-over-year increase, with 1.7 million customers across 180 countries and more than one billion users having touched the platform. The company counts 1,131 customers with $300,000+ annual contract values, reflecting strong enterprise adoption of its expanded platform beyond eSignature. As companies face increasing pressure to extract value from contracted commitments and reduce compliance risk, DocuSign CLM's position within the world's most trusted agreement infrastructure gives it a privileged entry point into enterprise contract intelligence.
Relativity confidentially filed for IPO in early 2026, the first legal tech company to do so since 2021, while rebranding as a legal data intelligence platform.
Relativity was founded in 2001 in Chicago by Andrew Sieja (originally as kCura) and rebranded under its current name in 2017 after its eponymous e-discovery platform became the industry standard. The company serves over 300,000 users in approximately 40 countries, including 198 of the Am Law 200 law firms and the U.S. Department of Justice, processing over 145 billion files through its cloud platform RelativityOne. Valued at $3.6 billion following a 2023 investment round, it plans to invest more than $170 million in R&D in 2025.
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