Key points:
- Agiloft appointed Microsoft veteran Jason Barnwell as chief legal officer, signaling a push toward data-driven, AI-enabled contracting.
- The hire follows KKR’s majority acquisition and the company’s recent expansion into AI contract playbooks.
- Barnwell aims to model modern contracting by using Agiloft’s platform internally and emphasizing people-first transformation.
Agiloft, the contract lifecycle management company majority-owned by KKR, has named longtime Microsoft legal operations leader Jason Barnwell as its next chief legal officer. The appointment, reported by Law.com, comes as legal departments and vendors continue to recalibrate modern contracting practices amid rapid advances in AI.
Barnwell spent 15 years at Microsoft shaping its global contracting systems, most recently serving as general manager and associate general counsel for monetization and business planning. He is known for building data-driven workflows that allowed Microsoft’s legal teams to automate and scale high-volume contracting tied to billions in procurement spending.
Agiloft is positioning his arrival as a pivotal moment for a company seeking what it calls “transformational” leadership. Barnwell said he was drawn to CEO Eric Laughlin’s vision for the company and its potential to reshape how legal teams deliver business value. “The picture that he painted for what’s in front of the company seemed like too much fun to miss out on,” he told Law.com.
KKR’s backing has given Agiloft substantial financial flexibility to pursue acquisitions and accelerate product development. Just months after the buyout, the company acquired Screens, a generative-AI contract playbook provider. The deal signaled a commitment to embed AI more deeply into CLM workflows and to compete in an increasingly crowded legal tech market.
Barnwell emphasized that meaningful transformation starts with people, not tools. He described many in-house teams as “so busy and so flooded with work” that they struggle to break down underlying processes. His goal, he said, is to simplify access to Agiloft’s platform in ways that relieve that pressure and expand the impact of legal teams.
He is also committed to having Agiloft’s own legal department run on the company’s software, creating a replicable blueprint for customers. The approach reflects a trend across legal tech: vendors demonstrating credibility by operationalizing their own tools internally.
Barnwell’s philosophy draws from his Microsoft tenure, where he led a “pirate ship of opportunity hunters” focused on digital transformation. In a LinkedIn post reflecting on the move, he credited the company with giving him broad authority to explore new models for delivering legal work.







