Your provider sent you a 50-page agreement written entirely by their lawyers, for their benefit. Behind SlingShot is 20 years of procurement experience working for the big guys — and a decision that it's time the tables turned. We know every trick in those agreements. Because we used to write them.
Every day, thousands of sole traders, support workers, allied health practitioners, and small care businesses sign agreements they don't understand — written by lawyers who've never met them and don't care about their interests.
No legal jargon. No waiting for a callback. No invoice in the mail three weeks later.
In June 2025, the ACCC secured a court-enforceable undertaking from Mable Technologies — a major NDIS platform — after finding unfair contract terms including exit penalties, auto-approval clauses, and one-sided liability exclusions in their standard agreements. The ACCC's 2025-26 compliance priorities explicitly include NDIS provider compliance with Australian Consumer Law. This is happening now. Small suppliers are exposed.
For 20 years, I worked in procurement for large organisations. I sat at the table where supplier agreements were drafted. I know what goes into them — and more importantly, I know why it goes into them.
The unlimited indemnity clauses. The unilateral variation rights. The asymmetric termination provisions. The 45-day payment terms when the government pays in 48 hours. These aren't accidents. They are deliberate decisions made by people who never expect to be challenged.
I watched supplier after supplier sign these agreements without understanding what they were giving away. A sole trader. A small allied health practice. An independent support worker. People who just wanted to do their work and get paid fairly for it.
I got to a point where I wasn't comfortable with it anymore. Not comfortable expecting suppliers to sign terms that could genuinely end their businesses. So I switched sides.
SlingShot uses AI to process the document at speed and scale — no human lawyer could review 50 pages in four minutes. But the risk categories it checks, the clauses it flags, the negotiation tactics it recommends: those come from 20 years of sitting in procurement meetings and watching exactly how these agreements get used against suppliers.
First analysis is on us. No credit card required.
A solicitor charges $400–$600/hr. Your first review is free. After that, $39 for a single analysis or $49/month for unlimited peace of mind.