5 things you need to do in the first 90 days of your NEC Contract
When it comes to NEC contracts, the first few weeks of a project set the tone for the entire delivery. Many disputes, delays, and unnecessary costs originate not from technical complexity but from overlooked processes, unclear roles, and poor documentation right at the start.
NEC4 is designed for proactive management. If you treat it like a traditional contract and “sort it out later”, you risk compounding small issues into major problems.
Small Mistakes, Big Consequences
Early inconsistencies in NEC4 contracts can escalate quickly. Common examples include:
- Incomplete Contract Data – Missing dates, unclear roles, or unvalidated options can cause confusion when a time-critical decision arises.
- Uncoordinated Scope / Works Information – Ambiguities in what needs delivering often surface as design clashes or interface disputes.
- Late or informal notices – Failing to issue early warnings or communicate formally can compromise cost recovery and schedule control.
These early oversights affect compliance, auditability, and operational efficiency. The later you try to correct them, the more effort, cost, and risk you introduce.
Why Compliance Suffers
NEC4 is process-driven. Poorly established routines at the outset can create compliance gaps:
- Time bars – Missing deadlines for early warnings or compensation events can reduce or eliminate your entitlement.
- Documentation gaps – Inadequate records of instructions, decisions, or approvals create audit risks and weaken defensibility in disputes.
- Fragmented communications – Multiple untracked emails and inconsistent notices make it impossible to demonstrate contract adherence.
Getting these foundations right isn’t optional. They protect your commercial and operational position from day one.
Operational Inefficiencies to Avoid
Without a solid start-up routine:
- Progress tracking becomes reactive rather than proactive.
- Programme updates are inaccurate, undermining forecasting and risk management.
- Compensation events are mishandled, causing delays in pricing, agreement, and ultimately cashflow.
The NEC4 mindset rewards daily contract management habits, not periodic reviews. Early attention to routines ensures smoother delivery and prevents unnecessary friction.
5 Things You Need to Do in the First 90 Days of Your NEC Contract
- Validate Contract Data – Confirm roles, response periods, key dates, and options are correct and complete.
- Clarify Scope / Works Information – Ensure requirements are coordinated, buildable, and aligned with pricing.
- Set Up Registers and Templates – Early Warning, Compensation Event, Programme tracker, and Defects register must be live.
- Agree Meeting Cadence – Weekly early warning, programme review, and compensation event meetings keep everyone aligned.
- Train Your Team – Short workshops on early warnings, programmes, compensation events, and time bars reinforce routines and accountability.
Start-Up is Front-Loaded
NEC4 is front-loaded by design. Success comes from running the contract daily as a management tool rather than opening it only when issues arise. A proactive set-up routine:
- Reduces surprises and misunderstandings.
- Improves cost and schedule control.
- Strengthens collaboration with structure, not ambiguity.
Remember, many NEC4 disputes do not stem from technical disputes but from poor early processes. By investing time in the first 30 to 90 days, you minimise risks, maintain compliance, and safeguard project value.
Make the Most of Your NEC4 Contract
Even small steps like clear roles, live programme management, disciplined communication, and prompt early warnings, can prevent future headaches. Front-loading these actions is far easier than unpicking misalignment later.
Want to make sure you’re starting your NEC projects in the right way? Take a look at our full NEC Beginner’s Guide.
Download the full NEC4 Beginner’s Guide
Why I Joined Built Intelligence and What I’ll Be Writing About
Genna Rourke joined Built Intelligence as Industry Engagement Director in January 2026. With nearly twenty years’ experience across quantity surveying and commercial leadership, Genna brings first-hand industry perspective to our work across FastDraft, Academy and wider thought leadership. In this new series, she will share practical views on the challenges construction teams face in contract management, capability development and commercial control. Hello. Here’s who I am and why I’m writing. I joined Built Intelligence in January 2026 as Industry Engagement Director. Before that, I spent nearly twenty years working as a quantity surveyor and commercial leader across infrastructure, civil engineering and contractor environments. I am a Chartered QS, MRICS and FCInstCES,...
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