How to Write a Statement of Work That Drives Contract Success

Subscribe to our Newsletter

How to Write a Statement of Work Header Banner

If you want to explore deeper into how the SOW fits among related documents like the Master Service Agreement (MSA), you can learn more about the difference between MSA and SOW to understand their unique purposes.

Learn the most Common Contract Issues — from scope creep to unclear terms — and how to prevent them with strong SOW governance.

For a deeper dive into distinguishing these documents and understanding their interaction, see this helpful primer on MSA vs SOW.

Establish reusable templates with standardized sections (objectives, deliverables, milestones, acceptance criteria). A template-based approach not only saves drafting time but also ensures every project starts with the same level of rigor.

No. While the structure is similar, industries adapt SOWs differently. For example, IT projects often highlight performance standards and testing cycles, while construction projects emphasize safety compliance and inspection milestones.

Yes. Modern CLM platforms can automate drafting, link deliverables to obligations, and flag potential risks. AI-powered systems even adapt SOWs as projects evolve, reducing manual oversight.

A strong SOW is measurable (clear deadlines and deliverables), enforceable (tied to a governing contract), and collaborative (drafted with input from all stakeholders).

Absolutely. Many organizations structure SOWs as “living documents” that can be updated with formal change orders as phases progress. This keeps the document relevant without rewriting it from scratch.