The NEC4 Brief

Gather

Hosted by Ben and Glenn, The NEC4 Brief is a monthly podcast that unpacks the ins and outs of the NEC4 contract, one clause, one issue, one real world example at a time. Each episode takes a practical look at how the contract actually works on site, not just on paper. From compensation events and early warnings to risk allocation and programme management, Ben and Glenn translate legal jargon into everyday lessons for contractors, project managers and quantity surveyors. It’s straight talking, experience led insight from two practitioners who’ve seen how NEC4 plays out in the real world: the good, the bad and the “that’s not what the contract says.

Episodes

  1. 6D AGO

    NEC4: The Activity Schedule Explained

    Send us Fan Mail Getting an NEC4 activity schedule wrong rarely fails quietly. It shows up as cash flow pain, awkward assessments, and disputes about what “complete” really means. We dig into why the activity schedule is a pricing tool rather than Scope, why NEC expects the contractor to prepare it, and how that single document can either stabilise a project or create friction for months. We compare NEC option A and option C in plain language. Under option A, the activity schedule directly drives interim payments through completed activities, so granularity and alignment with the accepted programme matter far more than many teams realise. Under option C, the activity schedule sets the target, while interim payment runs on Defined Cost plus Fee in an open book model. That difference can lull teams into letting compensation events drift, even though liabilities, revised targets and delivery reality still need to be kept up to date. We also tackle the practical contract administration: what “correcting” and “revising” mean under clause 55, why poor cash flow is not a stand-alone reason to revise, and how compensation events should change the Prices using Defined Cost plus Fee. Finally, we share two workable approaches for showing compensation event adjustments in the activity schedule, including how to handle omissions, large changes, and the temptation to front-load. If you work with NEC contracts, NEC4 option A, NEC4 option C, activity schedules, compensation events, project manager assessments, or defined cost records, this is a sharp refresher with immediate on-the-job relevance. Subscribe, share this with your commercial and planning teams, leave a review, and tell us: where have you seen activity schedules cause the biggest disputes? View the webinar: https://www.gatherinsights.com/en/webinars Join the LinkedIn Group: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/2893228/

    1 hr
  2. MAR 2

    Why Contract Data Turns Clauses Into A Working Contract

    Send us Fan Mail Contracts don’t fail because of one big clause; they slip on dozens of small entries that nobody questioned. We unpack how NEC4’s Contract Data Part One and Part Two turn rules into real delivery, decode those italicised terms that drive behaviour, and show why the first page of options quietly sets your risk, cost and programme story. From X1 inflation and X7 delay damages to X15 design liability and Y(UK)2 adjudication, we translate choices into consequences you can plan for. We walk through the contractor’s first read of Part One, the signals to seek in periods for reply, completion dates and key dates, and the red flags buried in Z clauses. Then we switch to Part Two: setting a defensible fee percentage, defining working areas so people costs are recoverable, naming key persons who actually move the needle, and submitting a credible programme that can be accepted on day one. We talk rates, schedules and the discipline of defined cost, and we clear a common myth: listing early warning topics does not allocate risk, it invites action. To cut drafting errors and speed mobilisation, we demo NEC Digital. It prevents incompatible option picks, hides irrelevant fields, and embeds plain‑English guidance where you need it. Z clause tools link edits to the exact clauses they change, and a shared workspace cleanly separates the client’s locked Part One from the contractor’s private Part Two until submission. In the Q&A, we cover homeworking as defined cost after the 2023 amendment, access delays under CE2, and how to align internal governance with contract timescales instead of bending the rules. If you care about fewer disputes, faster acceptances and better value, start with better entries. Listen, subscribe, and share the one Contract Data pitfall you want teams to stop making. Then leave a review so more NEC practitioners can find this conversation. View the webinar: https://www.gatherinsights.com/en/webinars Join the LinkedIn Group: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/2893228/

    59 min
  3. FEB 2

    If Your Z Clause Needs Latin, It Probably Needs A Bin

    Send us Fan Mail What if the clause you add to gain control actually costs you bidders, time, and money? We dive deep into NEC4’s option Z and show how to make additional conditions work for you rather than against you. Drawing on years of training, live project experience, and industry engagement, we unpack where Z clauses fit in NEC’s modular design and how to decide whether you need them at all. The through-line is discipline: define the mischief, try Scope or Contract Data first, then draft sparingly in plain English if—and only if—the contract truly needs an extra rule. We tackle the high-friction areas that drive disputes and tender withdrawals. You’ll hear why keeping constraints like working hours in the Scope preserves flexibility for critical one-offs, how halving time bars can create administrative chaos and miss valuable savings, and why pushing pre-contract errors onto contractors rarely delivers “certainty” once pricing and behaviour adjust. We also address governance head-on: if boards slow replies, extend reply periods transparently rather than deleting the project manager’s obligations. And we confront the cultural signal of deleting clause 10.2; removing “mutual trust and cooperation” tells bidders everything they need to know, and none of it helps. To balance cost certainty with value for money, we bring in Abrahamson’s risk principles—allocate to those with control, insurability, and efficiency incentives—and translate them into practical checks: scope quality, market appetite, team capacity, and insurance availability. Style matters too: use NEC’s defined terms, present tense, and active voice; avoid Latin and copy-paste Frankenstein’s monsters that conflict with core clauses. The payoff for this care is real: clearer bids, faster decisions, fewer disputes, and a healthier supply chain willing to lean in. If you care about fair risk, cleaner processes, and better prices, this one’s for you. Listen, share with your commercial and legal teams, and tell us where Z clauses have helped—or hurt—on your projects. Subscribe, leave a review, and send your questions for our upcoming session on contract data. View the webinar: https://www.gatherinsights.com/en/webinars Join the LinkedIn Group: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/2893228/

    1 hr
  4. JAN 28

    Making The Accepted Programme Work For You Under NEC4

    Send us Fan Mail A schedule on the wall won’t run your project. A living, accepted NEC4 programme will. We unpack how to turn the programme into a central management tool that reflects reality, accelerates decisions, and shrinks the space where disputes grow. From acceptance rules and deemed acceptance to resource clarity and client interfaces, we walk through the mechanics that make NEC’s prospective approach to change actually work on site. We dig into the lifecycle from tender to completion, why monthly (or faster) updates matter, and how to structure submissions so acceptance becomes routine rather than a negotiation. You’ll hear a clear breakdown of the consequences of acceptance and non‑acceptance, including when withholding triggers extra duties and how silence can lead to treated acceptance. We also tackle a frequent flashpoint: programmes that show planned completion beyond the completion date. You’ll learn why that can still be acceptable, how to separate acceptable from desirable, and how a realistic plan helps mitigation more than a neat fiction ever could. On change, we show how to represent compensation events on the programme before implementation without conceding liability, supported by a concise narrative that explains cause and impact. We compare approaches to time risk allowance and make the case for embedding TRA within activity durations while distinguishing it clearly from float to comply with NEC4 and protect assessments. Rounding out the guide, we share pragmatic fixes for common blockers: missing resource statements, out‑of‑date logic, unpaired planned and contract dates, and overcomplicated models that stall acceptance. If you want fewer surprises, stronger CE assessments, cleaner payments under Options A and C, and faster decisions across the board, this is your playbook for making the NEC4 programme work for you. Subscribe, share with your team, and tell us: what’s the one programme habit you’ll change this week? View the webinar: https://www.gatherinsights.com/en/webinars Join the LinkedIn Group: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/2893228/

    1h 2m

About

Hosted by Ben and Glenn, The NEC4 Brief is a monthly podcast that unpacks the ins and outs of the NEC4 contract, one clause, one issue, one real world example at a time. Each episode takes a practical look at how the contract actually works on site, not just on paper. From compensation events and early warnings to risk allocation and programme management, Ben and Glenn translate legal jargon into everyday lessons for contractors, project managers and quantity surveyors. It’s straight talking, experience led insight from two practitioners who’ve seen how NEC4 plays out in the real world: the good, the bad and the “that’s not what the contract says.