February 7, 2008

LegalTech 2008 Wrap Up

2:11 pm

 Wrapping up the first major law-related technology show of the year (and my first live blogging event), I have taken some good and bad things with me.

 

The good:

  • It's always good to stay in touch with the trends each vendor is promoting.  Based on the sessions, I think vendors may have been more reactive than trailblazing - or it could have been that the vendors that were more relevant to the topics in the sessions were prominent.  Either way, I think the tone is set for a year of vendors promoting themselves as having the best E-Discovery solution.
  • If you are an attorney who wants to knock out CLE credits as well as get your head spinning around the hundreds of technology solutions available to meet nearly any need your firm could require, this ain't a bad place to be.
  • Live blogging is possible in a large tech show with the right amount of focus and determination and hopefully gives readers some value for the toil.
  • This show is a great place to network if you are any way affiliated with the legal profession.

The bad:

  • Live blogging without consistent internet connectivity is difficult.   I spent my time in sessions sitting with my laptop writing the blog entries in Windows Live Writer (my current experimental desktop blogging tool), then doing a mass post when I got back to the suite where I had reliable wireless access.  This is a challenge I can't believe will be remedied without more demand for live blogging and will be dictated by the luck of whether there is good wireless access at the location of the show.
  • There was precious little focus on financial management in the show (qualification - I am biased).  One session on firm profitability (hosted by Thomson West) but that was it.  On the other hand, there were 6 sessions with the word E-Discovery in the title alone!  I think some wanted to make sure we understood the theme of the show - the beast in the jungle was no ordinary gorilla - it was the many faces of e-discovery.

I hope my fractured writing wasn't too much of an irritant.  Please feel free to give me feedback on what you liked, disliked, or would like to see me focus more on in the future.   

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LegalTech 2008 Day Three - Traffic Eases

10:56 am

Traffic is much lower this morning.   Mostly consultants and other vendors running around the exhibit hall.   

 

I asked some of those walking through about the e-discovery choices they are seeing - it seems that different vendors tackle different things under the banner of "E-Discovery".  For some it is as limited as getting headers from a Lotus Notes email so you can track the origination of the email thread.

 

It is apparent that vendors are trying to find the right formula for selling e-discovery tools to lawyers.  And at LegalTech, you will have lots from which to choose.

 

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February 6, 2008

Rick Borstein (Adobe Systems) Podcast

4:48 pm
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Firm Profitability - Best Industry Practices

3:33 pm

Sat in on Thomson West's presentation on Firm Profitability.  The attendance was relatively light, which from the perspective of someone who writes a blog on financial management was disappointing.  It was later in the day so it may have been a bad time to talk money.

The panelists discussed the importance of leverage to profitability, except one noted that clients demand the most skilled to run the trials which typically fall to the equity shareholders.

They talked about the use of client satisfaction surveys as a way to ensure clients were happy with their work. 

When it came to how they determined profitability, the discussion immediately went to cost allocation.  There were some interesting ways the panelists allocated costs to timekeepers in their firms, but it came down to allocating the direct and indirect costs and determining a cost per hour from which to compare to the timekeeper rate.  One panelist went into detail, explaining the 150 line items tracked per timekeeper to determine costs.  Another panelist didn't track timekeeper cost at all (part of a smaller firm) but rather determined profitability on a matter-by-matter basis.

The panelists also talked about FTE analysis - (full time equivalency) - One uses historical average to project into future, another tracked in two ways:  if the timekeeper was only there for part of the year, they credited for length of service.  For part timers, they allocated for the entire year since the office, secretary and liability insurance among other costs remain throughout the year even though when the part timer isn't there.

I sat in for about 30 minutes, which was longer than the other ones today, but I couldn't sit any longer.  I am not a big fan of the panel discussion for a CLE track.  It isn't focused enough and goes in many directions, sometimes leaving the audience confused (could have just been me - it is hard for me to sit still too long).

No surprises in this discussion - except I would have focused more on the metrics to increase profitability - which they might have done in another format.

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Relationship building between inside and outside counsel

3:17 pm

Came in during panel discussion.  Sparsely attended (at least at this point).

Talked about selection, expectations, financial considerations, technology, enterprise content management and metrics.  

Regarding metrics, in-house corporate counsel are looking at many factors when choosing and retaining outside counsel.  Price is obviously a large concern, but it isn't primary.  Track record, efficiency and personality are other factors that are considered and, in the panel's opinion, should be tracked.

One interesting thing that was discussed by the panel - they like to find out the method by which a law firm compensates people internally.  How is your firm ensuring collaborative effort?  Do you get the same level of service with those who are delegated work as the ones who you were sold on to do the work?

Across the board, "you get what you pay for" - if you have to re-do things over and over because of bad service, it isn't worth it.  One of the panelists admitted that he would be willing to pay extra if he is confident that the work will be done right the first time.  Apparently bitten many times by poor work product.

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E-Discovery Litigation Readiness

2:02 pm

I think I have found the predominant theme this year: E-Discovery.  From what people tell me, this was a focus last year at LegalTech as well.  I sat in on a E-discovery session hosted by Kroll.  It was well attended.

I came in late - they were talking about IM programs.  If you are looking at getting IM logs, don't just look at the server logs.  Make sure to look at the local machine, which also logs instant messages.

Identifying and preserving voicemail:  in the past you had to use stand alone recorder to record voice mails.  Now with the unified messaging systems it is easy to have them made into wav files for preserving them.  However, not easy to search these files.  Tools exist to do it, but they didn't go into any of them.

Talked with one of the LexisNexis reps regarding LAW Prediscovery tools that can help search things like wav files, and he showed me how easy it can be to search for things either by extension, filter by selection, or just a regular search.   So there are tools out there that can search for any electronic discovery, you just need to look at the ones that will work for your firm.

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LegalTech Day 2: Interview with Adobe's Rick Borstein

1:04 pm

 Just finished interviewing Rick Borstein, Business Development Manager with Adobe.  He specializes in legal markets and took some time to discuss ways to use Adobe Acrobat that attorneys may not currently utilize.  I recorded it and hope to have it posted later this afternoon.

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February 5, 2008

LegalTech Day 1 Wrap

7:00 pm

Lots of vendors, lots of people.  The show is targeted to litigation attorneys, and within that, mostly defense litigators.  I did talk to a few who were corporate counsel and there may have been tracks that attracted those in transactional practice, but I didn't see it.

 

It won't be until tomorrow afternoon til we'll see the first session on financial management.  You can bet I will be attending the session "Firm Profitability:  Best Industry Practices".

 

I wish I had more insight on today's events, but there wasn't really much about which to write from my perspective.  I think it may have to do with my placement (standing in a booth for most of the day didn't help) so tomorrow I will plan better to get around and see more sessions.

 

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LegalTech not just for attorneys

3:30 pm

I noticed while working the booth today that I was seeing as many paralegals, administrators and consultants as I saw attorneys.  And, in comparison to the ABA Techshow where I see the staff leading the attorneys around, here I see lots of them going solo through the aisles.

 

I went to the ALM booth and talked to Jill Windwer and asked her about it.  She advised that ALM allows firms to bring anyone from their office to LegalTech.  This lets those who aren't attorneys enjoy the freebies in the exhibit hall while attorneys get CLE credit at the sessions.

 

Tomorrow I will learn from today's experience:  I am going to more sessions and bringing my laptop.

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Early Case Assessment Can Save Clients Money

2:06 pm

 Sat in on one of LexisNexis' sponsored presentations related to case assessment.  Only there a few minutes but discussed tools that can help track costs of litigation so you can better assess the costs early and relate it to the client to help them know what it will take to litigate their matter.  From an attorney's standpoint, giving accurate information regarding the potential costs to the client related to their litigation will help the client make an informed business decision whether and when to settle.

 

It was also noted how using pdfs to help organize scanned documents by attaching all documents into one large document that can be used to search certain words or documents.  I may have to bring this up tomorrow when interviewing Adobe's Rick Borstein.

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