Contracts are meant to spell out rights, obligations, and risks – but all too often, they lack the human context that ensures real understanding.
Most contracts capture the final agreement — the moment a customer signs or clicks "I agree" — but they often miss the story behind that decision. In practice, people reach agreements only after receiving explanations, asking questions, and reviewing summaries. All those contextual elements (the Q&A, clarifications, summaries) are usually left out of the written contract. We’ve all seen it happen: a customer disputes a fee they claim “was never mentioned,” or complains “I didn’t realize that’s what I agreed to.” This gap between what the business thinks it communicated and what the customer actually understood is where misunderstandings and disputes take root. In short, the signed document records consent, but not the journey to consent, leaving a dangerous blind spot in the agreement process.
It’s no wonder misunderstandings are common. Studies show 91% of people consent to terms without reading them, and most contracts are written at a postgraduate level — far above the average person’s comprehension. Courts have even begun questioning whether a signature alone proves “informed” consent. This means a formal contract often isn’t telling the full truth of the deal: the customer might not truly grasp what they signed. The result? A chasm between paper agreement and actual understanding, which can undermine trust from the outset.
In regulated sectors especially, there’s a growing realization that trust is built on more than a signed PDF. Regulators are clear: “a signature on its own is no longer enough.” Firms must ensure clients actually understand the agreements they enter. The UK’s new FCA Consumer Duty is a prime example, requiring financial services to prove that customers understand what they’re being told and signing up for. In other words, evidence of understanding has become as important as the agreement itself. If one side doesn’t grasp the terms — or if there’s no proof they did — genuine trust in that contract is lacking.
From a trust standpoint, a piece of paper (or a digital PDF) means little if later one party can say, “I never really agreed to that.” True confidence comes when both sides can be sure they shared the same understanding at the time of agreement. That’s why courts and regulators now focus on the context of consent: how was the information presented? Was the person given information in a clear way and at the right time? Did they acknowledge key points? A signature without this shared context is shaky ground for trust. Conversely, when a customer and a firm both know there’s a record of what was explained and agreed in plain terms, there’s a solid foundation of transparency. Trust flourishes when neither side has to rely on memory or one-sided paperwork — instead, they have a common evidence of the decision-making process.
When the context is not documented, it often gets lost – and that loss can be costly. Imagine a scenario: a customer asks a sales representative, “Are there any hidden fees?”, and the rep says “No, none.” The customer signs the contract, which in fact contains a small clause about fees. Months later, a surprise fee appears. The customer feels betrayed and complains: “I was told there were no hidden fees!” Now it’s their word versus the fine print. With no record of that verbal assurance, resolving the dispute becomes a messy battle of claims. Sadly, this scenario is common. In many industries, complaints frequently boil down to “I didn’t realize that’s what I agreed to,” precisely because the supporting context was never captured.
The consequences of missing context are very real. Regulators and ombudsmen often side with customers if a firm cannot demonstrate that key information was clearly communicated in the decision process. In the UK, the Financial Ombudsman Service received over 165,000 complaints in 2022–23, and roughly one in three was resolved in the customer’s favor — not necessarily due to bad intent by businesses, but often because customers genuinely hadn’t understood the terms. In other words, lack of documented understanding became the deciding factor. This isn’t just a legal headache; it’s a hit to a company’s reputation and bottom line. Firms have been directed to pay compensation even when they “technically” disclosed the info, simply because the customer wasn’t adequately informed in practice.
Lost context means lost trust. An agreement without evidence of context is essentially an agreement without clarity. Both parties are left “flying blind” about what each other truly knew and understood. This environment allows misunderstandings to thrive and breeds distrust. More tangibly, it leads to more complaints, more disputes, and more regulatory scrutiny. Companies end up spending time and money fighting fires — reviewing call recordings, handling ombudsman cases — that could have been avoided by capturing context upfront. It’s clear that the old approach of “sign here, figure it out later” no longer works in a world of Consumer Duty and empowered consumers.
How do we fix this gap? Enter the context contract – a proposed evolution of agreements where all the decision-making context travels with the contract. Instead of a contract being just a static document of terms, a context contract comes bundled with the evidence of how those terms were understood and agreed upon. It’s about “stapling” the supporting information to the contract itself, so that years later anyone can see not only what was agreed, but how it was agreed.
Think of it as bringing the ideas of open banking or consent receipts into the world of contracts. For instance, privacy laws now encourage giving users consent receipts – a proof document recording what they agreed to when they shared personal data, which boosts transparency and user control. In a similar vein, a context contract provides a transparent, shareable record of the understanding behind an agreement, not just the legal terms. Both parties can revisit the agreement and see the full picture: the plain-language summary the client was shown, the key points they acknowledged, the questions they asked and the answers given, even video or audio clips of explanations if available.
What might be included in a context contract? It could compile things like:
A digest of the contract that was provided to the client (so they can’t later say they never saw the “important bits”).
Any questions the customer asked (to a salesperson, on a call, via chat) and the answers they received, all time-stamped and attached.
Records of the customer confirming they understood critical points – for example, ticking a box or giving a verbal confirmation that “I understand there may be fees after the first year.”
If an explainer video was shown, or an AI chatbot provided advice, or a brochure was given, copies of these are linked as part of the agreement’s context.
By preserving this context alongside the contract, the agreement becomes a living document of the full decision journey. Both sides can later open up that file and see, “Ah, here’s the one-page summary I received and agreed was accurate. Here’s where I asked about X and got an answer. And here’s me acknowledging the risks highlighted to me.” This way, the contract isn’t just words to be interpreted in court; it’s the shared reality of the deal. The context contract transforms an agreement from a static snapshot into a rich narrative of mutual understanding. It provides what traditional contracts lack: memory. And memory is what prevents the “who said what” games that erode trust.
Adopting context-rich contracts brings tangible benefits for businesses and clients alike:
When the context is attached, there are far fewer surprises. Customers are less likely to say “I never knew about this fee” when the fee was clearly explained and recorded at signing. Greater clarity upfront means fewer “I didn’t know that” misunderstandings, which directly translates to fewer grievances. And if a complaint does arise, the context serves as clear evidence to resolve it quickly, rather than a drawn-out argument.
For regulated firms, a context contract is a compliance dream. It creates an audit trail proving that you did more than hand over a disclosure — you ensured actual understanding. The FCA’s Consumer Duty, for example, explicitly expects firms to enable and evidence customer understanding, not just obtain a signature. By recording how information was presented and that the client truly comprehended it, firms can demonstrate they met their obligations and treated customers fairly. This approach protects the firm from regulatory risk while also protecting the customer. It’s a proactive safety net for both sides.
In an era when trust is a competitive advantage, being transparent about the entire agreement process sets progressive firms apart. Clients feel more confident when they know nothing is “hidden”; every promise and explanation is on the record. This openness builds trust and makes the client experience more collaborative. Rather than feeling like legal adversaries, both parties can refer to a single source of truth about the agreement. It’s no longer “your word against mine” — it’s a shared understanding. Over time, this leads to stronger client relationships and a reputation for honesty and clarity.
A context contract approach forces companies to design their customer communications for understanding, not just compliance. That means plain language summaries, opportunities to ask questions, and interactive elements that make the process more engaging. Customers aren’t left to slog through 40 pages of jargon alone. Instead, they get information in digestible forms and can proceed with true confidence. It transforms the signing experience from a necessary evil into part of a transparent service. A more informed customer is a happier customer – and one who’s far less likely to churn or complain because they hit an unexpected snag down the road
In short, context contracts align everyone’s expectations from the start. The cost of misunderstanding – whether measured in complaints, fines, or lost business – drops dramatically when understanding is ensured at the point of agreement. And importantly, it creates a more equitable relationship. Both parties share responsibility in the record of what was agreed. This mutual accountability further reinforces trust: neither side can later claim ignorance or spring surprises, because the complete evidence is attached to the contract itself.
The idea of the context contract represents a shift from business-as-usual. It’s not about adding more paperwork; it’s about ensuring meaningful transparency. Just as open banking gave consumers control over their data and consent receipts gave people proof of their privacy choices, context contracts can give all parties confidence in what’s been agreed. This concept is especially timely as regulations tighten and consumers expect clarity. Rather than seeing it as a burden, forward-thinking firms view it as an opportunity – a chance to differentiate through trust and fairness.
Implementing context-rich agreements is increasingly feasible with modern technology. In fact, some platforms are already enabling this vision. For example, the i agree platform is pioneering tools to capture and attach decision-making evidence to contracts – from interactive summaries to logged Q&A – essentially making context contracts a reality. Adopting such an approach doesn’t mean overhauling everything; it can integrate with your existing processes to record the evidence of understanding behind each signature.
Imagine never again having to argue over who said what – because it’s all right there in the contract bundle. That’s the future the context contract points toward: one where compliance is baked in, customers feel empowered, and agreements truly reflect a meeting of minds, not just pen on paper.
Are you ready to bridge the gap between “I agree” and “I understand”? Embracing context in contracts is a powerful step to deliver on the promise of trust and transparency in client relationships. It’s a move that not only meets the letter of the law under frameworks like FCA Consumer Duty, but also strengthens your brand’s integrity in the eyes of clients.
The best way to understand the power of a context contract is to see it in action. Our demo walks you through how summaries, Q&A, and acknowledgements are stapled to an agreement — so you can experience what trust and transparency feels like in practice.
A context contract is an agreement that carries not just the legal terms, but also the evidence of how those terms were explained and understood. It can include summaries, Q&A logs, acknowledgements, and even videos — so the decision-making journey is attached to the contract itself.
Because disputes rarely come from the fine print — they come from different understandings of what was explained. Without context, it becomes a matter of “who do you believe?” Attaching context ensures both sides can see the same evidence of how the agreement was reached.
Trust grows when nothing is hidden. If both parties know they can revisit the exact summaries, answers, and confirmations at any time, confidence increases. It’s no longer one side’s word against the other — the record speaks for itself.
Context often gets lost in call recordings, forgotten summaries, or verbal explanations. When it’s missing, complaints and disputes rise, and firms struggle to prove customers understood what they signed.
Yes. The FCA expects firms to prove that customers genuinely understood the products and services they agreed to. A context contract provides the audit trail to demonstrate this — protecting firms while delivering fairer outcomes for clients.
Absolutely. That’s the point. Clients shouldn’t have to request call recordings or chase explanations later — they should be able to open their phone and see the entire decision journey whenever they need it.
It’s about much more than compliance. It’s about building stronger relationships, reducing complaints, and showing customers you respect their right to understand. Compliance is the baseline — trust and transparency are the advantage.
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