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Intelligent contracting platform Juro has released operator, a chat interface that enables users to ask natural language questions about their contracts.
Instead of filtering and digging through documents, users can now ask questions like 'Which contracts worth more than $100k are set to autorenew?', or 'What termination rights do we have with Microsoft?'. Operator returns the answer in the chat window - with citation links.

Operator's open beta follows a successful closed beta with a group of customers. One associate GC user in the US said:
"Being able to surface insights like this makes life so, so much easier for the business - I can't wait to use it more."
Its chat interface lets you ask questions in natural language about your contracts and their data. Unlike general AI tools, Operator has direct, secure access to your contracts, and gives citation links for every answer.
Operator joins existing AI tools within Juro for drafting contracts, extracting data, and review & redlining, meaning customers can process contracts from end to end in one platform, with AI acceleration at every stage.
In-house legal teams are increasingly turning to AI rather than law firms or additional headcount to get work done, according to Juro's 'State of In-house 2026' research. When asked how much of the work currently sent out to law firms could be insourced using AI, 68% of respondents said more than 10%, 20% said more than 25%.
With Operator, in-house teams have an in-house contract intelligence layer that anyone can access, reducing the burden on legal teams and empowering the business to move faster.
Juro CEO & Co-founder, Richard Mabey, said:
"We want to give legal teams AI that doesn't just accelerate their work - it does it for them. With Operator, anyone can ask complex questions about contracts, just like they would to a lawyer - and get comprehensive, accurate answers quickly."
Hear more from Richard here, and see Operator in action here.

Sofia Tyson is the Senior Content Manager at Juro, where she has spent years as a legal content strategist and writer, specializing in legal tech and contract management.
Sofia has a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) from the University of Leeds School of Law where she studied the intersection of law and technology in detail and received the Hughes Discretionary Award for outstanding performance. Following her degree, Sofia's legal research on GDPR consent requirements was published in established law journals and hosted on HeinOnline, and she has spent the last five years researching and writing about contract processes and technology.
Before joining Juro, Sofia gained hands-on experience through short work placements at leading international law firms, including Allen & Overy. She also completed the Sutton Trust’s Pathways to Law and Pathways to Law Plus programs over the course of five years, building a deep understanding of the legal landscape and completing pro-bono legal volunteering.
Sofia is passionate about making the legal profession more accessible, and she has appeared in several publications discussing alternative legal careers.