Contractbook vs Linear
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Contractbook builds out admin and permissions plumbing for larger CLM deployments.
Contractbook's recent work is concentrated on team administration. User Groups landed in late January, followed by group-level company permissions in March that lets admins assign company-wide capabilities to entire groups at once. The earlier Users page consolidation set up the surface this all attaches to. A small branding addition — company logo on outbound emails — rounds out the window.
The CLM is being shaped to support large companies with structured access policies, not just small teams sharing a workspace. Each release is removing per-user manual setup and replacing it with group-driven inheritance — a clear up-market move. Cadence is steady and tightly themed.
Expect SCIM/SSO depth to follow next, plus more granular role inheritance (per-Space, per-template). Audit logging or compliance-export features are a natural extension once group permissions stabilize.
Linear keeps pushing its Agent deeper — from Teams chat to MCP tools to the actual codebase.
Linear is rapidly converting itself from issue tracker into an agent-native engineering coordination layer. Every major shipment in the last month — Microsoft Teams entry point, MCP tool access, Releases tracking, and now Code Intelligence — extends what Linear Agent can reach. The traditional issue-tracking surface continues to receive steady fixes and quality-of-life work, but the strategic energy is concentrated on giving the Agent more context and more reach.
Linear is positioning its Agent as a workspace orchestrator rather than a chat assistant bolted onto issues. The progression is unmistakable: first messaging surfaces (Slack, Teams), then external tools via MCP, now the codebase itself. Each step removes a reason a user would need to leave Linear to answer a work question, and steadily makes the Agent useful to PMs, support, and sales — not just engineers writing tickets.
Expect Linear to keep widening the Agent's reach into adjacent technical surfaces — CI/CD signals, incident tools, design and data systems — and to introduce paid Agent-action tiers as usage proves out. The Code Intelligence beta will likely move to general availability with codebase-scoped permissions becoming a first-class enterprise feature.
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