Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Contract Intelligence & Data Extraction
Pramata raised $40M+ to extract structured data from Global 2000 enterprise contract portfolios — software licensing, telecom, financial services — combining AI and human expert review.
Pramata is a contract intelligence company that specializes in extracting accurate, structured data from large portfolios of complex commercial contracts, serving enterprise legal, finance, sales, and operations teams that need reliable contract data to drive business decisions. Headquartered in Houston, Texas, Pramata has raised more than $40 million and serves Global 2000 enterprises with contracts across software licensing, telecommunications services, financial services agreements, and complex B2B commercial relationships. The company combines AI-powered data extraction with human expert review to deliver a level of accuracy for complex contracts that pure-AI approaches cannot consistently achieve.\n\nPramata's approach is differentiated by its focus on data quality assurance, offering a human-in-the-loop model where its team of contract professionals validates AI extractions before delivering structured contract data to customers. This quality layer is especially important for complex contracts where high-value obligations, unusual provisions, or non-standard language require human judgment to interpret correctly. The resulting structured data can be delivered into CRM systems like Salesforce, ERP platforms, or custom customer portals, making contract intelligence accessible to non-legal business users.\n\nPramata operates in the contract data and intelligence segment of the CLM market, competing with Evisort, Kira Systems, and the analytics modules of enterprise CLM platforms. The company has built expertise in contracts associated with enterprise B2B revenue relationships, making it particularly useful for revenue operations, customer success, and finance teams that need accurate visibility into customer contract terms, renewal dates, and entitlements alongside legal department use cases.
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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