Ranking
The vendor's agreements were benchmarked against thousands of vendor forms and are in the top 15% for customer favorability.
70% customer favorability, based on 750 plus contract signals powered by Certify.
Indicates balanced, low-risk terms favorable to the customer.
Top 15% IT contract. No structural blockers. Procurement-ready.
Contract Performance
Start with a quick risk summary, then compare this agreement to similar contracts.
Insurance
Insurance requirements
- Nexthink is not required to carry any form of insurance
Summary
Liability cap
- Nexthink's liability is capped at 12 months' fees
- There is no secondary cap on Nexthink's liability
- Customer's liability is capped at 12 months' fees
- There is no secondary liability cap on Customer's liability
Exceptions to the liability cap
- Claims related to violations of Customer's IP rights are excluded from the cap on Nexthink's liability
- Claims related to gross negligence or recklessness are excluded from the cap on Nexthink's liability
- Claims related to fraud or willful misconduct are excluded from the cap on Nexthink's liability
- Claims related to violations of obligations relating to confidential information are excluded from the cap on Nexthink's liability
- Indemnification obligations relating to IP infringement are excluded from the cap on Nexthink's liability
- Claims related to payment obligations by Customer are excluded from the cap on Customer's liability
- Claims related to violations of Nexthink's IP rights are excluded from the cap on Customer's liability
- Claims related to gross negligence and/or recklessness are excluded from the cap on Customer's liability
- Claims related to fraud and/or willful misconduct are excluded from the cap on Customer's liability
- Claims related to violations of obligations relating to confidential information are excluded from the cap on Customer's liability
- Claims related to Customer's use of the service, violations of an acceptable use policy or other restrictions or responsibilities are excluded from the cap on Customer's liability
- Indemnification obligations relating to IP infringement are excluded from the cap on Customer's liability
- At least some indemnification obligations (other than relating to data or IP infringement) are excluded from the cap on Customer's liability
Excluded damages
- One or more forms of indirect damages are excluded from Nexthink's liability
- One or more forms of indirect damages are excluded from Customer's liability
Exceptions to excluded damages
- There are no exceptions to the damages excluded from Nexthink's liability
- There are no exceptions to the damages excluded from Customer's liability
Timing of claims
- There are no limits on when claims must be brought by Customer
- There are no limits on when claims must be brought by Nexthink
Claims
- Nexthink indemnifies Customer for claims based on third-party IP infringement
- Customer indemnifies Nexthink for claims based on third-party IP infringement
- Customer indemnifies Nexthink for claims arising from violation of any third party rights (other than IP infringement)
Scope of obligations
- Not all types of IP are covered by Nexthink's IP indemnification
- Nexthink's IP indemnification covers copyright claims
- Nexthink's IP indemnification covers patent claims
- Nexthink's IP indemnification covers trademark claims
- Nexthink's indemnification obligations are the exclusive remedy for indemnified claims
- Nexthink's indemnification includes the obligation to provide a defense
- Nexthink's indemnification includes the obligation to hold harmless
- Customer's IP indemnification covers all types of IP
- Customer's indemnification obligations are limited to third-party claims
- Customer's indemnification obligations are not the exclusive remedy for indemnifiable claims
- Customer's indemnification includes the obligation to provide a defense
- Customer's indemnification does not include the obligation to hold harmless
Limitations, conditions, or exclusions
- Obligations include conditions regarding Customer's cooperation or Nexthink's control of the defense
- Obligations include conditions regarding Customer's use of the services in breach of the contract
- Obligations for intellectual property infringement only cover certain jurisdictions
- Nexthink's IP indemnity does not cover claims resulting from modifications, combinations, or use of an outdated version of the service
- Nexthink's indemnity obligations include conditions regarding settlements
- There are time constraints on when Customer must notify Nexthink of an indemnifiable claim
- Obligations include conditions regarding Nexthink's cooperation or Nexthink's control of the defense
- Customer's indemnity obligations include conditions regarding settlements
- There are time constraints on when Nexthink must notify Customer of an indemnifiable claim
Warranties Offered
SLAs
- Nexthink offers an SLA regarding uptime
- The specified remedy for Nexthink's violation of the uptime SLAs is credit or refunds
- The specified remedy for Nexthink's violation of an uptime SLA is the exclusive remedy
- Nexthink offers some other form of SLA
- There is no specified remedy for Nexthink's violation of the other form of SLA
Other warranties
- Nexthink warrants that the services will meet specified standards of care or conduct
Implied warranties
- Nexthink disclaims some or all implied warranties
Data Rights
Data provided by Customer
- Nexthink does not claim ownership of any data provided by Customer
- Nexthink does not receive usage rights in any data provided by Customer beyond what is necessary to improve or provide the services
Data Security
Subprocessor obligations
- The contract does not list subprocessors
- Nexthink is required to ensure that subprocessors are bound by data or privacy requirements similar to those in this contract
Security commitments
- Nexthink makes contractually binding data security commitments
Third party audits, standards, or certifications
- Nexthink commits to comply with at least one third-party data security audit, standard, or certification
- Nexthink commits to some other audits, standards, or certifications which TermScout was unable to classify - see citation
- There are no qualifications and/or limitations to Nexthink's commitments to comply with third-party data security audits, standards, or certifications
Data breach notification policy
- Nexthink commits to notifying Customer of a security breach impacting Customer's data
Summary
Vendor's confidential information
- Customer must provide some protection of Nexthink's confidential information
Customer's confidential information
- Nexthink must provide some protection of Customer's confidential information
- Nexthink explicitly commits not to disclose Customer's confidential information, except as necessary to provide the services
- Nexthink explicitly commits not to use Customer's confidential information, except as necessary to provide the services
Mutuality
- All commitments concerning confidential information are mutual
Residuals clause
- There is no residuals clause
Warranties Offered
Compliance with documentation/specifications
- Nexthink warrants that the services will comply with certain documentation and/or specifications, but the warranty has some conditions or qualifications
Payment Terms
Late payment penalties
- There are penalties for late payments
Payments due
- Customer has at least 30 days to pay
Vendor's expenses
- Nexthink does not reserve the right to bill Customer for any expenses incurred by Nexthink
Summary
Customer's termination rights
- Customer has certain rights to terminate for cause
Refunds
- Customer's termination rights do not include the right to a refund
Auto-renewal
- The contract has auto-renew language, but Customer may opt out
- The contract has auto-renewal language and Customer may opt out by giving greater than 45 days' notice
Vendor's termination and suspension rights
- Nexthink does not receive the right to terminate the contract for convenience
- Customer has between 11 and 30 days to cure a breach before Nexthink can terminate for cause
- Nexthink may suspend Customer's access to the service for material breach of the contract
- Nexthink may suspend Customer's access to the service for payment-related issues
Customer's IP
Licenses to Customer IP
- Nexthink receives the right to use Customer's name and/or marks publicly
Publicity rights
- Nexthink's use of Customer's name and/or marks is not subject to Customer's guidelines
Assignment of Customer IP or work product
- Customer does not assign any work product or other IP to Nexthink
Summary
Non-compete
- There are no restrictions on Customer's right to compete with Nexthink
Non-solicit
- There are no restrictions on Customer's right to solicit
Exclusivity
- There are no restrictions on Customer's ability to procure similar products or services from other vendors
Vendor's assignment rights
- Nexthink is allowed to assign in the event of a merger or acquisition
- Nexthink is allowed to assign in the event of a corporate reorganization
- There are consent requirements restricting Nexthink's ability to assign the contract
- Consent requirements do not apply in the event of a merger or acquisition
- Consent requirements do not apply in the event of a corporate reorganization
- There are no notice requirements restricting Nexthink's ability to assign the contract
- There are no restrictions or conditions on Nexthink's right to assign to a competitor of Customer
Customer's assignment rights
- Customer is allowed to assign in the event of a merger or acquisition
- Customer is allowed to assign in the event of a corporate reorganization
- There are consent requirements restricting Customer's ability to assign the contract
- Consent requirements do not apply in the event of a merger or acquisition
- Consent requirements do not apply in the event of a corporate reorganization
- There are no notice requirements restricting Customer's ability to assign the contract
- There are no restrictions or conditions on Customer's right to assign to a competitor of Nexthink
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Why this Matters
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How TrustMark™ Works?
Data Extraction
Scans and converts legal text into structured data.
Objective Scoring
Clauses benchmarked against market data.
Deal Breakers
Risks and non-negotiables flagged early.
Benchmarking
Compares your contract to market standards.
Certification
Contract validated after meeting risk and score thresholds.
Based on 750 plus contract signals benchmarked against market data.
Certified Contract Reports, Explained
Verified™ contract reviews are reviews of contracts that have been carefully checked by contract experts. This review is designed to help users understand the rights and obligations associated with the Main Services Agreement ("MSA") for Nexthink, Inc.. We looked at the issues found in 'Term Sheets' and did not look for any other issues.
For more information on TermScout's contract review process, visit our methodology page.
In order to qualify for Certification, a contract must meet the following criteria:
- Achieve a TermScout rating of Balanced or Customer Favorable, and
- Be free of all designated Deal Breaker clauses.
The difference between certified Balanced and certified Customer Favorable is the TermScout favorability rating achieved by the contract. Each of these criteria is more fully described below.
A contract is balanced when it allocates risks between the parties in a roughly equal manner, as determined by TermScout's two-step, data-driven analysis. First, we use our proprietary AI to abstract over 750 defined data points from each contract we analyze. Then, we use an algorithm to objectively score that data. Because TermScout looks at the exact same set of data points and uses the exact same scoring algorithm in every contract analysis we conduct, you can now compare contracts on an apples-to-apples basis. (You can read more about the data points that TermScout analyzes in every IT contract here.)
This enables us to objectively rate contracts at both the agreement level and by key topic area (e.g., limitations of liability, indemnification, warranties, etc.) and show you which contracts are vendor favorable, which are customer favorable, and which are balanced.
Not all risks are created equal. Even if a contract shifts only a single risk to the buyer, the contract still may not merit certification if that risk is material enough. Examples of these types of Deal Breakers include exclusivity, complete disclaimers of liability, etc. Accordingly, TermScout will not certify a contract if it contains any of the following Deal Breaker clauses,² which TermScout identified by reference to market data and input from prominent buy-side and sell-side legal experts from TermScout's Innovation Advisory Council:
This makes it nearly impossible for a customer to recover from a vendor, no matter what goes wrong - even if the vendor violates other provisions of the contract.
Signing non-competes means contractually promising not to engage in a certain line of business. This is something most businesses want to avoid where possible.
Agreeing not to solicit a vendor's employees, customers, or vendors sounds reasonable, but it places challenging burdens on the customer to ensure they comply.
Agreeing not to procure similar services from other companies can severely hinder a company's ability to do business.
Privacy laws require companies to follow strict rules with respect to how they handle certain types of data. This clause presents major risks to a company's ability to comply with such laws.
It's extremely rare for a customer to need to assign IP rights to an IT vendor. Doing so can materially jeopardize a company's rights in its own IP.
Since most IT services today are delivered "as a service", customers often upload wide varieties of information onto vendors' servers. Confidentiality commitments are expected by most customers.
The goal of TermScout's reports is to provide users with the data necessary to make an informed decision about whether they can accept the terms. The data provided in TermScout's reports includes:
- Term Sheet: A full report of the key rights and obligations contained in the agreement.
- Overall Ratings: TermScout's overall impression of the favorability of the contract vis a vis the parties. These ratings are algorithmic approximations of favorability that are based on market data and the subject views of contract experts with experience in the specific type of contract.
- Rare Clause Radar: TermScout identifies and surfaces a list of the most rare and material clauses that favor your counterparty.
- Playbooks: Playbooks are a way of programming into TermScout's software a specific set of acceptance criteria for a contract type. All accounts have access to sample Playbooks for select templates, and Pro accounts have the ability to build custom Playbooks.
- Comparable Contracts: We'll show a list of contracts sorted by favorability ratings and allow for the comparison of similar contracts based on position, industry, and contract type.
- Market Data: Any right or obligation in a contract can be compared to market data for similar contract types, including data from TermScout's Contract Market Database™ of thousands of public contracts and anonymized and aggregated data from hundreds of negotiated contracts.
Certified Contract Reports contain only a subset of the above data. To access all of the data available, create a free account here and search for the desired contract in Triage.
Please note that this report focuses on the identification of terms from the contract documents listed under 'Scope of Review' and compares them against a defined set of criteria. Certain services may be subject to additional terms not available to TermScout, such as purchase orders and other deal-specific documents. You should always review the terms associated with the specific service you are using and know that TermScout's ratings generally do not cover (a) services purchased through a reseller, (b) offline variants of any of the Agreements, (c) service-specific terms that override any of the terms discussed here, or (d) free services. You also should consult your legal counsel if you have any questions about the meaning, significance or assessment of any agreement or provision.
TermScout prepared this report with an average use-case customer in mind and operated under the assumptions listed below (the "Key Assumptions"). To the extent that provisions in a contract vary based on specific circumstances that differ from the Key Assumptions, TermScout ignores those variations. Additional contract-level assumptions, if any, are disclosed in 'Notes to Customer'.
Key Assumptions
- Customer is an average "end user" of the service (i.e. not a partner, distributor, or developer).
- Customer is not a government entity.
- Customer is a US-based company and is using the service in the US.
- Customer is a paying user (i.e. not a user of free services).
- Customer is not using beta services.
- Unless otherwise noted, service-specific terms that may override or supersede the terms of the Agreement are not reviewed by TermScout.
We reviewed the MSA for Nexthink and any documents specifically listed under 'Scope of Review'. For purposes of this report, "Customer" means the party contracting with Nexthink and "Vendor" means Nexthink.
References herein to the "Agreement" are to the following documents:
- The Primary Document: Main Services Agreement ("MSA")
- The following Secondary Document(s) expressly incorporated by reference into the Primary Document and reviewed by TermScout as part of this analysis:
TermScout did not review any documents other than those listed above. If other documents form part of this Agreement, the answers provided by TermScout may be incomplete or incorrect. TermScout's accuracy commitments only cover documents specifically identified in this section.
No additional notes to customer for this report.
Frequently Asked Questions
Find quick answers to the most common questions about our platform, process, and agreements.
Procurement and IT teams often escalate infrastructure agreements when contractual security commitments do not align with the operational criticality of the systems being supported. Delays increase when agreements rely on vague security standards, external policies subject to unilateral change, or limited incident-response obligations. Enterprise buyers generally expect infrastructure vendors to provide clearly defined commitments around access management, operational resilience, monitoring, and remediation support before approving deployment into production environments.
Buyers often pay close attention to whether the agreement reflects the same operational controls and governance posture described during technical review. Concern increases when contracts narrowly define breach obligations, limit audit cooperation, or reserve broad vendor discretion over infrastructure security practices. Enterprise teams may interpret inconsistent or heavily qualified security language as a signal that operational accountability and long-term governance controls are not fully mature.
Buyers typically compare contractual security commitments against vendors supporting similar hosting, networking, or production infrastructure environments. Agreements generally appear more market aligned when they include measurable operational obligations, structured escalation procedures, and transparent responsibilities tied to incident management and subcontractor oversight. Contracts become harder to approve when critical security expectations are fragmented across multiple documents or operationally difficult to enforce after onboarding.
Enterprise review teams often escalate agreements when security provisions create uncertainty around continuity planning, access governance, incident coordination, or operational recovery responsibilities. Additional concern arises if the contract does not clearly address shared infrastructure dependencies, configuration changes, or post-incident cooperation obligations. Buyers increasingly evaluate these provisions as indicators of long-term operational reliability rather than narrow technical compliance commitments alone.
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