How to use this guide

  1. Pick the role section that matches what you are hiring for.
  2. Lift the JD template as your starting point. It is already shaped to attract the operator-type candidate instead of the law-firm-refugee type.
  3. Run finalists through the interview rubric. Score 1–5 per dimension, sum, and compare across candidates.
  4. Anchor your offer to the comp sheet. Numbers are US national; adjust ±15% for HCOL / LCOL metros.

Section 1 — Contract Manager

Owns the day-to-day contract pipeline: intake, classification, redlining, approvals routing, signature, and post-signature obligation tracking. In a 500–2,000 FTE company, one Contract Manager handles 200–600 contracts a year depending on industry. They are the person who makes sure the sales team's NDAs get out the door in 24 hours instead of 8 days.

This is not a contract drafter (that is an attorney) and not a paralegal (different career track). It is an operations role inside the legal function.

JD template

Contract Manager — Legal Operations
[Company] · [Location / Remote]

The role
You'll own the full contract lifecycle for [Company] — from intake through
post-signature obligation management — partnering with our legal team,
sales, and procurement. You'll be the single point of accountability for
contract throughput across the business.

What you'll do
- Triage incoming contract requests; route to the right reviewer based on
  risk, value, and template availability
- Negotiate standard commercial terms (NDAs, MSAs, order forms, DPAs) within
  pre-approved playbook positions; escalate to counsel when off-playbook
- Manage the contract repository and obligation calendar — renewals,
  auto-renewals, milestone payments, MFN clauses
- Build and refine playbooks, templates, and approval workflows so legal
  doesn't become a bottleneck as the company scales
- Partner with [CLM tool — e.g. Ironclad, Agiloft, ContractWorks] admin to
  improve workflows over time

What we're looking for
- 3+ years managing contracts in a corporate (not law firm) environment
- Comfortable negotiating commercial terms without a JD
- Demonstrated ability to track and improve cycle-time metrics
- Excellent written communication — you'll draft customer-facing redlines
- Bonus: experience with [your CLM tool], familiarity with [your industry]

What we're not looking for
- A drafter or attorney looking for a non-billable seat (this is an ops role)
- A paralegal looking to move into ops without commercial-negotiation reps

Comp band: $[X]K base + [bonus structure]

Interview rubric

90 minutes total: 60 working session + 30 fit. Send three artifacts 24 hours in advance: a sample MSA, a customer redline, and your playbook.

  1. Issue spotting. Probe: Send a sample MSA, a customer redline, and your playbook 24 hours in advance. What's the worst clause they got back? 1 = Misses material risk; 3 = Catches obvious red flags; 5 = Identifies risk and the business implication.
  2. Playbook adherence. Probe: When does playbook stop applying? 1 = Treats playbook as gospel; 3 = Knows when to escalate; 5 = Articulates the principle behind each rule.
  3. Negotiation logic. Probe: Walk me through how you'd respond. 1 = Adversarial or black-and-white; 3 = Reasoned trade-offs; 5 = Anticipates counter and has fallback positions.
  4. Throughput thinking. Probe: How would you triage 30 NDAs in a day? 1 = One-at-a-time mindset; 3 = Batches by type; 5 = Has a system: templates, auto-routing, exception queue.
  5. Cross-functional fluency. Probe: How do you handle a sales rep pushing for terms outside playbook? 1 = Says no, walks away; 3 = Gets counsel involved; 5 = Reframes to the underlying business need.

Pass bar: ≥18/25 on the working session, no single dimension scored 1.

Comp snapshot

Source Low / 25th Mid / Median High / 75th 90th Sample
Robert Half 2026 Salary Guide $69,000 $86,500 $106,250 recruiter-curated
Glassdoor (Apr 2026) $107,996 $137,548 $177,870 $222,165 self-report, US

The gap between the Robert Half band and Glassdoor self-report is the largest in this guide. Robert Half skews toward small-and-mid-market in-house teams; Glassdoor self-reports skew toward larger employers and tech. A senior Contract Manager at a Bay Area SaaS company prices closer to $160,000 base; a mid-career CM at a 500-FTE manufacturer prices closer to $95,000.

Section 2 — CLM Administrator

Owns the contract-lifecycle-management software itself: workflows, integrations, user access, reporting, template library, and clause library. They are the person who makes Ironclad, Agiloft, Conga, DocuSign CLM, SirionLabs, or ContractWorks actually work for the company.

This role did not exist five years ago. It exists now because the CLM market has matured to the point where the software is powerful enough to require an admin and the org has enough contract volume to justify one.

JD template

CLM Administrator — Legal Operations
[Company] · [Location / Remote]

The role
You'll own [CLM tool] end-to-end at [Company] — workflows, integrations,
reporting, template/clause library, user access, and continuous improvement.
You're the bridge between legal, sales, procurement, finance, and IT for
anything that touches the contract pipeline.

What you'll do
- Configure and maintain workflows in [CLM tool] — intake forms, approval
  routing, conditional logic, e-signature integration
- Own the template + clause library; partner with attorneys to keep
  pre-approved language current
- Build and maintain integrations with Salesforce, NetSuite/[ERP], Slack,
  and [identity provider]
- Run quarterly reporting on cycle time, approval bottlenecks, contract
  value flowing through each workflow
- Train new users; serve as Tier-1 support for legal/sales/procurement on
  CLM questions
- Own data quality — metadata extraction, OCR cleanup, repository hygiene

What we're looking for
- 2+ years administering a CLM platform (Ironclad, Agiloft, Conga,
  DocuSign CLM, SirionLabs, ContractWorks, or similar)
- Comfortable building no-code/low-code workflows; bonus for SQL or
  basic scripting
- Has trained non-technical users on contract software before
- Experience with at least one CLM-adjacent integration (Salesforce CPQ,
  Slack approvals, identity provider SSO)
- Bonus: certification in [your CLM] (Ironclad has Certified Admin program;
  Agiloft has Certified Implementer)

Comp band: $[X]K base + [bonus structure]

Interview rubric

75 minutes total: 45 technical + 30 fit. Use a sandbox and ask the candidate to work live.

  1. Workflow logic. Probe: Build a three-step approval workflow in the sandbox you provide. 1 = Hardcodes users and breaks on exceptions; 3 = Builds the flow correctly but with rough edges; 5 = Uses dynamic role assignment and clean conditional logic.
  2. Clause library hygiene. Probe: Add a new clause to the library and tag it for retrieval. 1 = Treats metadata as optional; 3 = Creates the clause correctly; 5 = Explains why taxonomy and tagging matter.
  3. Debugging discipline. Probe: You've seeded a stuck contract. Diagnose it. 1 = Clicks around without checking the audit log; 3 = Finds the issue after some trial and error; 5 = Uses the audit log first and explains the failure mode.
  4. Integration fluency. Probe: Walk through how you would integrate the CLM with Salesforce. 1 = Does not know the difference between API and native package; 3 = Understands the basic integration options; 5 = Explains API, native package, and middleware trade-offs clearly.

Pass bar: completes 3 of 4 tasks within time; can articulate why each step was the right one.

Comp snapshot

Source Low / 25th Mid / Median High / 75th 90th Sample
Robert Half 2026 — Contract Administrator (junior comparable) $61,000 $72,250 $90,000 recruiter-curated
Glassdoor 2026 — Contract Lifecycle Manager (senior comparable) $96,934 $122,050 $155,436 $192,011 self-report, US
ZipRecruiter — Contract Lifecycle Management postings (2025–2026) $89,000 $190,000 aggregate listings

Title drift is acute for this role. A platform-admin CLM hire at a mid-market company prices closer to the Robert Half Contract Administrator band; a senior CLM Administrator at a large in-house team prices closer to the Contract Lifecycle Manager line. Metro data is omitted here because the public sample is too thin.

Section 3 — E-Billing Specialist

Owns the inbound flow of outside-counsel invoices through the e-billing platform, reviews line items against billing guidelines, pushes back on non-compliant entries, approves for AP, and reports outside-spend trends back to the GC.

In a Fortune 1000 in-house legal team, this person handles $10M–$80M of outside spend annually. The role exists because the dollar amounts are too large to leave to attorneys and too rules-bound to leave to AP.

JD template

E-Billing Specialist — Legal Operations
[Company] · [Location / Remote]

The role
You'll own outside-counsel invoice review and approval at [Company] —
running roughly $[X]M of annual outside spend through our e-billing platform
([tool]). You're the operator who keeps our outside-counsel partnerships
financially disciplined while preserving the working relationships.

What you'll do
- Review outside-counsel invoices for compliance with our billing guidelines
  (block billing, vague descriptions, non-shareable timekeepers, expense
  caps, rate adherence)
- Approve, adjust, or reject line items in [tool]; document the rationale
  for each adjustment
- Communicate with billing partners at law firms when invoices need rework;
  preserve the relationship while enforcing the guidelines
- Build monthly and quarterly outside-spend reports — by matter, by firm,
  by practice area — for the GC and CFO
- Partner with the matter-management team to ensure invoices map cleanly
  to the right matters and budgets
- Serve as the primary point of contact for our [tool] vendor

What we're looking for
- 2+ years reviewing outside-counsel invoices in an e-billing platform
- Strong working knowledge of LEDES 1998B / LEDES 98BI v2 file formats
- Demonstrated ability to recover ≥3% of submitted spend through line-item
  adjustments without harming firm relationships
- Comfortable with high-volume Excel work (pivot tables, lookups,
  conditional formatting)
- Bonus: paralegal or accounting background

Comp band: $[X]K base + [bonus structure]

Interview rubric

60 minutes total: 30 working session + 30 fit. Send a sanitized invoice and your billing guidelines 24 hours in advance.

  1. Guideline application. Probe: Walk through your adjustments on a sample invoice. 1 = Misses obvious violations; 3 = Catches block billing and vague descriptions; 5 = Also catches subtle issues like senior-billed-as-junior and expense caps.
  2. Communication craft. Probe: Draft the email back to the billing partner. 1 = Aggressive or apologetic; 3 = Professional and neutral; 5 = Firm but warm, with a clean path to respond.
  3. Quantitative thinking. Probe: Calculate the total adjustment and the percentage of invoice. 1 = Estimates wildly; 3 = Adds correctly; 5 = Computes the percentage and flags an outlier adjustment.
  4. Tool fluency. Probe: What would you do differently in the e-billing tool? 1 = Doesn't know the tool; 3 = Knows the tool exists; 5 = Has opinions about the platform's quirks and constraints.
  5. Relationship preservation. Probe: How do you handle a partner who pushes back? 1 = Caves or escalates immediately; 3 = Stands firm and references guidelines; 5 = Reframes around predictable, audit-clean billing.

Pass bar: ≥15/25 on the working session, with no single dimension scored 1, and an email draft that passes the “would you send this?” sniff test.

Comp snapshot

Source Low / 25th Mid / Median High / 75th 90th Sample
Robert Half 2026 — Legal Billing Specialist $45,750 $52,000 $57,500 recruiter-curated
Glassdoor 2026 — Legal Billing Specialist $51,490 $61,838 $74,810 $88,577 self-report, US
ZipRecruiter — Legal Billing Specialist (Oct 2025) $63,492 aggregate
PayScale 2026 — Legal Billing Specialist $58,991 self-report
BLS OEWS May 2024 — Paralegals & Legal Assistants (federal floor) $61,010 n≈376,200 jobs

Experience-tiered band

Experience Base salary Total comp HCOL adjustment LCOL adjustment
0–2 years $58K–$72K $62K–$78K +12 to +18% -8 to -12%
3–5 years (most common hire) $72K–$92K $78K–$102K +12 to +18% -8 to -12%
6–10 years (senior IC) $88K–$112K $98K–$128K +10 to +15% -7 to -10%
10+ years (lead IC / mgr) $108K–$135K $122K–$155K +10 to +15% -7 to -10%

The Robert Half band tracks law-firm timekeepers, not corporate in-house e-billing operators. The Glassdoor median sits closer to the in-house role, and the BLS paralegals floor corroborates it. The HireLegalOps experience-tiered band above is the corporate in-house benchmark.

Section 5 — Common hiring mistakes

Where to find candidates

  1. HireLegalOps.
  2. CLOC member directory + targeted LinkedIn outreach.
  3. Apollo.io / ZoomInfo filtered by current title.
  4. Industry-specific Slack communitieslegal-ops-collective, inhouse-legal, nyc-legal-ops.
  5. Boomerang hires from mature legal-ops orgs.
  6. Last: general boards like LinkedIn and Indeed.

Universal interview anti-patterns

  • The brain-teaser interview. “Why are manhole covers round” tells you nothing about whether someone can run a contract pipeline.
  • The unstructured “tell me about yourself.” Burns 15 minutes and reveals less than a five-minute structured background walk.
  • The “what’s your weakness” question. Everyone has rehearsed it.
  • The salary-history question. Illegal in 22 states plus DC and multiple cities.
  • The 7-stage interview loop. Three to four well-designed sessions outperform seven redundant ones.

Universal offer mistakes

  • Slow-rolling the offer. Time-to-offer is the biggest hire/no-hire variable for mid-career legal-ops candidates.
  • Lowballing on flexibility. Remote or hybrid is table stakes for legal-ops roles in 2026.
  • Skipping the equity conversation at private companies. Even a small grant signals partnership.

When to use a recruiter

  • Do not for individual contributor roles with 0–6 years of experience.
  • Maybe for IC roles with 7+ years and lead or manager roles.
  • Yes for Director and VP of Legal Operations roles.

Sources

Built from CLOC's 2025 State of the Industry, the Robert Half 2026 Salary Guide, ACC member surveys, and pattern recognition across approximately 3,500 legal-ops postings live on LinkedIn over the last 30 days. Sources are cited inline in the companion salary report and the role guides.

This guide is a living document. If you spot something off, or have a perspective from your own hiring experience, email it to hello@hirelegalops.com — corrections and contributions get attribution in the next revision.

— Tommy, HireLegalOps