
Why contracts usually fall out of date
Contracts don’t become risky because they’re old.
They become risky because the business has changed.
Common changes include:
- roles expanding beyond their original scope
- informal promotions or restructures
- new managers making people decisions
- growth in headcount and complexity
When contracts stay static but the business evolves, misalignment forms quietly.
That misalignment only shows up when decisions are challenged.
The biggest myth about updating contracts
Many business owners believe contracts should be:
- reviewed every year, or
- left alone unless legally required
Both approaches miss the point.
Contracts are not compliance checklists.
They are decision-support tools.
Updating contracts too often creates noise.
Leaving them untouched creates risk.
The right trigger is change, not time.
Clear signs your contracts should be reviewed
Most businesses don’t need an audit to know something’s off.
Common warning signs include:
- roles that no longer resemble what’s written
- managers unsure what flexibility they have
- hesitation around termination or notice
- reliance on “that’s how we’ve always done it”
- contracts written for a much smaller business
If decisions feel harder than they should, contracts are often part of the problem.
When updating contracts is highest risk
Timing matters.
Contract updates can become risky when they occur:
- immediately before or after a dispute
- during performance management
- after a Fair Work threat
- without clear explanation
Poorly timed updates can look reactive or self-serving, even when intentions are reasonable.
This is why contract changes should be proactive, not defensive.
How contracts should be updated in practice
Updating contracts is rarely about rewriting everything.
In practice, effective updates usually involve:
- aligning role descriptions with reality
- tightening termination and notice clauses
- correcting award or NES misalignment
- improving flexibility and variation wording
- strengthening confidentiality and IP protection
The goal is clarity, not complexity.
Well-updated contracts reduce friction rather than create it.
Do employees need to agree to contract changes?
Yes, in most cases.
Contract updates generally require:
- consultation
- agreement
- clear communication
However, agreement does not require negotiation chaos.
Problems arise when:
- changes are rushed
- reasons aren’t explained
- updates feel one-sided
Handled properly, most updates are accepted without issue.
How the proposed restraint changes affect timing
Proposed reforms announced in the 2025–26 Federal Budget are expected to significantly limit non-compete clauses from 2027.
For many businesses, this raises a practical question:
Should we wait until the law changes?
In most cases, the answer is no.
Even under current law:
- restraint clauses are already difficult to enforce
- overly broad restraints often fail
- reliance on non-competes creates false confidence
The smarter approach is to:
- review contracts now
- reduce reliance on fragile restraints
- strengthen confidentiality, IP and non-solicitation clauses
That way, contracts remain effective regardless of legislative change.
Why “we’ll deal with it later” usually backfires
Delaying contract updates often leads to:
- repeated uncertainty
- inconsistent decisions
- increased settlement pressure
- reactive legal advice
By the time a dispute arises, options are narrower and more expensive.
Updating contracts early preserves choice.
How contract updates reduce risk across the business
Aligned contracts:
- support consistent management decisions
- reduce argument during disputes
- give managers confidence
- shorten resolution timelines
They don’t eliminate risk.
They contain it.
For growing businesses, that containment is critical.
Where HR support adds the most value
HR support is most effective when it:
- identifies when updates are actually needed
- prioritises high-risk clauses
- coordinates compliant changes
- supports communication with employees
This avoids unnecessary rewrites while fixing real exposure.
The goal is not perfect contracts.
It’s usable, current protection.
FAQs
Before contracts become a problem
If your business has grown but your contracts haven’t changed, misalignment is likely already there.
Contract updates are safest and simplest when they’re done calmly, early, and with the future in mind.
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