Advantages 👍
- - Swift clause scanning: A 24-page service agreement finished processing in just under a minute during my test run.
- - Clear explanations: Each flagged term comes with a concise note describing why it might hurt negotiating power, which gave me confidence while editing unfamiliar language.
- - Straightforward layout: Tabs for “Issues”, “Full Text”, and “History” kept navigation simple; even colleagues without legal training found what they needed quickly.
- - Custom risk profile: I could dial sensitivity up or down depending on the transaction size, preventing noise when working on lower-stakes contracts.
- - Export flexibility: The tool allowed both redline and clean versions, cutting out an extra round of Word edits.
Drawbacks 👎
- - English only
- - File-size ceiling
- - Browser-based limitation
- - Cost for casual users
- - No third-party storage sync
goHeather is an AI-powered contract assistant that flags risky wording and offers plain-language fixes in moments.
How to use goHeather
- Upload a PDF, DOCX, or copy-paste the text straight into the dashboard.
- Select the preferred review depth: quick scan for red flags or full clause-by-clause analysis.
- Watch goHeather tag high-risk terms in colour, then click any highlight to read a short explanation plus suggested wording.
- Accept, tweak, or dismiss each suggestion and generate a clean version for download.
- Save the project in your workspace or export a summary report for the team.
Hands-on impressions of goHeather
Advantages
- Swift clause scanning: A 24-page service agreement finished processing in just under a minute during my test run.
- Clear explanations: Each flagged term comes with a concise note describing why it might hurt negotiating power, which gave me confidence while editing unfamiliar language.
- Straightforward layout: Tabs for “Issues”, “Full Text”, and “History” kept navigation simple; even colleagues without legal training found what they needed quickly.
- Custom risk profile: I could dial sensitivity up or down depending on the transaction size, preventing noise when working on lower-stakes contracts.
- Export flexibility: The tool allowed both redline and clean versions, cutting out an extra round of Word edits.
Drawbacks
- English only: Agreements containing French sections were ignored rather than translated or assessed, forcing a manual review.
- File-size ceiling: Anything above 5 MB triggered an error message; splitting large appendices became a routine chore.
- Browser-based limitation: There is no desktop client, so a solid internet connection is mandatory during revisions on the move.
- Cost for casual users: The monthly plan makes sense for firms handling contracts daily, yet startups with fewer documents may hesitate.
- No third-party storage sync: I still had to download files before sending them to SharePoint, adding an extra step.