This a short version response to Dennis Kennedy's short version of his great article yesterday.
In Seven Legal Technology Trends for 2007 - Widening the Digital Divide in Law Practice, your expressions “technology-forward lawyers” and “technology-backward lawyers” are absolutely apposite and apply equally in the
Only last night, I attended a major event at The Law Society in
If a law business is not using IT to gain at least some competitive advantage, it does beg the question what is the real purpose of having IT? Technology in a law practice is surely more than just a simple utility like water and electricity?
1. Reacting to Microsoft.
Fully agree.
A. Upgrading to New Microsoft Versions.
Agree, but for those firms currently not on 2003 or even XP, and there will be many, the gap will only widen.
B. Macintosh and Linux.
Agree. Niche firms are better positioned and more agile to choose, but Microsoft and Microsoft Word in particular remains the standard legal desktop / application, and only a confident firm is likely to change.
C. Open Source, Freeware/Shareware, and Web 2.0.
Agree. Only last Wednesday and Thursday, did I attend the annual two-day Legal IT Show 2007 in
2. E-Discovery - Evolution, Not Revolution.
To my knowledge, there was not one e-discovery product on show at Legal IT 2007. I suspect that is partly because the show needs to cater for all the different types of
E-management of documents, emails, records, etc is still maturing in the
A. Tools for Everyday Cases.
Adobe 8 is already here, but I wonder how many
B. Litigation Support Managers.
The
C. “Big Iron” for Big E-Discovery.
Technology-forward and technology-backward resonates here. Deeper IT budgets will also exacerbate the gap between the haves and have-nots.
3. Making Sound Business Decisions about Technology.
Agree.
A. Audits and Cost Savings Efforts.
Agree, but measurement generally of a simple mix of qualitative and quantative improvements has often been constrained by a combination of the absence of decent performance toolsets, which work across multiple back-end systems, and the right institutional mindset to measure, review and change behaviour as a part of a constant business process.
B. Applying Honest-to-Goodness Business Principles.
Agree, but on technology, most
C. Outsourcing Revisited.
Definitely agree, but by way of comparison, in the case of offshore outsourcing, the UK’s early experiences of sub-continent call centres of the UK’s major high street banks have not all been good news. Perversely, outsourcing, whether onshore or offshore, is perhaps likely to be the choice of larger and wealthier firms, rather than smaller and less profitable firms.
4. The Security and Disaster Recovery Combination.
Agree. Law firms have limited IT budgets, so this has to be one of their priorities. Allocating budget to develop social tools for business use, for example, may be squeezed because of this higher threat.
A. Recent Redefinition of Disasters.
Agree.
B. Applying Recent Learning to Setting Priorities.
Agree. Allen & Overy’s fire last year is a good example.
C. The Combo Disaster.
Agree. For example,
5. Portability Becomes a Priority.
Agree, but in the
A. Movement to Laptops.
Agree, and this may be a function of the current big topic in
B. The Decline of the Blackberry?
Very many lawyers are still to get Blackberries. Will ships pass in the night without realising the business changes at work?
C. Encryption Arrives.
Agree. In the
6. The Internet is Back.
Agree. With so many of us influenced as consumers by Google, YouTube, MySpace, Skype and various other news media sites, static law firm websites look positively last century. One might expect greater use of RSS feeds as firms try to make their web offerings more modern and useful to clients.
A. Yellow Pages and Local Search.
Agree.
B. Creating a Meaningful Web Presence.
Agree. The process has already started.
C. Email Alternatives.
Agree, but again the
7. Collaborative Tools and Toolboxes.
Agree. Microsoft Sharepoint is already at work here in some of the large firms.
A. Document Tools.
Agree.
B. Let’s Conference.
Agree. Work life balance, flexible working, business continuity planning, will all influence this change. As consumers, we can already do it for free with the likes of Skype.
C. Web 2.0.
Agree, but the bulk of the
Conclusion.
Agree. Anyone who has travelled on the London Tube will have heard the immortal platform announcement “Please mind the gap”. The Legal Services Act is due to be enacted this 2007 and, for that reason alone, the