Harvey used its Harvey FORUM event this week to showcase a deepening push into AI-driven legal workflows, unveiling new products and partnerships aimed at large law firms and in-house legal teams. The company introduced Command Center, an “intelligence layer” designed to help innovation and knowledge-management leaders track AI usage, benchmark performance, and query proprietary data as they scale enterprise programs.
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Harvey also announced Contract Intelligence, a system that consolidates fragmented contract workflows and uses “contract agents” to run first-pass reviews, apply playbooks, generate redlines, and escalate issues that require attorney judgment. The tool updates playbooks and clause libraries based on executed work and provides portfolio-level analytics, positioning Harvey more directly in contract-lifecycle management and legal operations.
At Harvey FORUM’s Law Firm Day and In-House Day, executives and partners from firms such as McGuireWoods, Vinson & Elkins, Dentons, A&O Shearman, and others discussed training future lawyers on AI and the economics of law-firm transformation. This engagement underscores Harvey’s strategy to become core infrastructure for both firms and corporate legal departments, supporting recurring, higher-value enterprise contracts.
The company also highlighted a strategic partnership with DeepJudge, integrating firms’ historical work product and institutional knowledge into Harvey’s AI agents while preserving access controls and ethical walls. Testimonials from partners at Holland & Knight suggest that combining Harvey and DeepJudge can improve drafting speed while keeping results aligned with firm-specific standards and precedents.
Separately, Harvey promoted a blog and discussions with international firms including Gowling WLG, Mallesons, Hengeler Mueller, and Hall & Wilcox that emphasize shifting legal AI metrics from simple adoption to outcome-based measures such as responsiveness, work quality, and client value. This focus on demonstrable performance gains may enhance Harvey’s positioning with sophisticated buyers who want measurable ROI from AI deployments.
Overall, the week’s developments indicate Harvey is moving beyond point solutions toward an integrated platform spanning contract management, AI program governance, and firm-specific knowledge integration. If Command Center and Contract Intelligence gain traction and the DeepJudge partnership scales, Harvey could reinforce its role as a key enterprise provider in the maturing legal AI market.

