
Why this article exists
In many organisations, the word claim immediately triggers discomfort.
Senior management often treats contract claims as something to be avoided at all costs—out of fear that they may upset clients, damage future business, or strain relationships. As a result, genuine entitlements are ignored, delayed, or quietly absorbed by the project.
In my experience, this mindset is both unnecessary and damaging.
Contract claims, when raised sanely, honestly, and within contractual boundaries, are not signs of adversarial behaviour. They are indicators of a functioning commercial system.
This article explains why claims should be seen as a healthy project tool, not a failure of relationships.
If you’ve wondered whether contract claims damage relationships or protect projects, this article explains when claims are necessary, when they’re harmful, and how mature teams use them to keep projects commercially healthy.
In brief
Contract claims are an inherent part of EPC and project-based contracts. When used correctly, they surface misalignments, protect project viability, and restore commercial balance. Problems arise not from claims themselves, but from misuse—either by avoiding legitimate claims or by raising fictitious ones. Mature projects treat claims as structured conversations governed by contract, not emotion.
The fear around claims — and why it’s misplaced
I’ve repeatedly seen senior management shy away from claims, driven by an unspoken fear:
“If we raise claims, we may lose future business.”
This fear is understandable—but flawed.
Everything in a project relationship is governed by the contract agreed between parties. Claims are not deviations from that relationship; they are part of it.
Yes, claims raise eyebrows.
Yes, clients may push back initially.
But that does not make claims illegitimate.
Avoiding rightful claims in anticipation of future work often results in:
- Eroded project margins
- Internal frustration
- Distorted commercial performance
- Unsustainable delivery models
Appeasement at the cost of the project rarely works in the long run.
Claims are not a profit recovery mechanism
One of the biggest misunderstandings around claims is intent.
Claims are not meant to:
- Recover estimation mistakes
- Compensate for poor planning
- Make up lost profit
I’ve seen subcontractors submit long lists of fictitious claims, invented purely to cover their own estimation errors. Ironically, the same subcontractors often failed to present genuine claims for legitimate extra work they had actually executed.
Both behaviours are damaging.
Fictitious claims destroy credibility.
Unraised genuine claims destroy viability.
Neither helps the project.
A pattern I’ve seen across projects
In contrast, I’ve also seen claims raised properly—and work exactly as they should.
On some projects, clients reacted strongly at first. There were rounds of correspondence, detailed clarifications, and tense discussions. However, because the claims were:
- Grounded in contract entitlement
- Supported by facts
- Presented clearly and professionally
they were ultimately honoured.
Over time, clients recognised an important truth:
The survival of one party indirectly ensures the survival of the other.
A project that bleeds silently does not become a better long-term partner.
The situations described are anonymised patterns observed across multiple projects and organisations.
When claims actually strengthen relationships
Healthy claims do something important.
They:
- Surface misalignment early
- Force clarity on scope, risk, and responsibility
- Prevent resentment from building quietly
- Enable honest commercial conversations
This is closely tied to communication and escalation discipline in projects:
👉 https://projifi.blog/5-reasons-projects-fail-team-communication/
When claims are raised transparently, they reduce future surprises.
Knowing when not to raise a claim
Equally important is knowing when not to raise a claim.
I’ve had situations where claims were prepared internally—but stopped before being sent to the client. Why?
Because the root cause was our own mistake.
In such cases, pushing a contractual claim would have been dishonest and counterproductive. The right response was to:
- Acknowledge the error internally
- Absorb the impact
- Use relationship capital to explain the situation honestly
Surprisingly, when this approach is taken maturely, clients often empathise.
This is where judgment matters more than entitlement.
Claims, relationships, and reality
There is a false dichotomy often presented:
“Either we protect relationships, or we protect the project.”
In reality, mature organisations do both.
They understand:
- Contracts exist to remove ambiguity
- Claims exist to restore balance
- Relationships exist to handle imperfections
This mindset aligns closely with leading without authority and relying on trust rather than fear:
👉 https://projifi.blog/project-manager-without-authority-lead-anyway/
👉 https://projifi.blog/why-trust-really-beats-supervision-in-epc-projects/
What healthy claim management looks like
Across projects, a few principles consistently hold true:
1. Claims are not negative if they are genuine
A valid claim raised professionally is a signal of discipline, not hostility.
2. Know your entitlement under the contract
Claims should be based on clear contractual grounds, not emotion.
3. Appeasement at the cost of the project fails long-term
Silent losses today become structural weakness tomorrow.
4. Sanity matters more than aggression
What you ask for—and how you ask—determines credibility.
5. Relationships help when mistakes are yours
When there are no contractual grounds, honesty and transparency often earn empathy.
The danger of avoiding claims altogether
Projects that avoid claims entirely often exhibit deeper problems:
- Poor commercial awareness
- Fear-based leadership
- Lack of contractual literacy
- Hidden financial stress
Such projects look calm—until they suddenly collapse.
Claims, raised correctly, act as early warning signals.
📌 If you’re leading projects, remember this
- Claims are part of the contract, not a breach of it
- Genuine claims protect project viability
- Fictitious claims destroy trust
- Silence is not professionalism
- Judgment determines whether claims heal or harm
Final thought
Contract claims are not signs of failure.
They are signs that the commercial system is working as designed.
What damages projects is not the presence of claims—but the lack of maturity in how they are handled.
When claims are grounded in entitlement, presented sanely, and guided by judgment, they protect both the project and the relationship.
That balance—not fear—is what keeps projects healthy.
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