Technology & Innovation

A new model for the law firm

March 20, 2012

Global

March 20, 2012

Global
Our Editors

The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Many experts believe that the legal industry is especially ripe for innovation. Rimon Law Group is one example of a legal partnership that is experimenting with a range of alternative practices to create a smaller, nimbler organisation using technology to network a disparate team of legal specialists.

At traditional law firms, senior partners are the “rainmakers” who focus on bringing in new clients, while much of the legal work is executed by junior associates. Rimon has instead built up a network of partners, each with specialist areas of focus, who directly handle clients and related projects. The firm is also trying to move away from the open-ended hourly billing that defines much of corporate law, and towards more fixed costs. “We’re doing what we can to make pricing more predictable, accessible, and tie our incentives together with those of our clients,” says Yaacov Silberman, the firm’s co-founder.

Technology underpins the model that Rimon is striving to craft. Its partners are largely mobile workers who use a range of cloud-based tools to collaborate. Clients can access partners when needed via phone, email, instant messaging, video or in person. When the firm hires sufficient partners in a geographic area, it then opens a physical office to serve as a point for networking and client meetings. “We’re trying to balance this dichotomy between virtual and bricks and mortar to find the right place to exist in that spectrum, as there are benefits to both models,” explains Mr Silberman. “People don’t want virtual lawyers, they want real lawyers. But virtual tools are useful.”

Looking ahead, he agrees that much of the low-end work of the legal industry will be automated by technology, or simply outsourced to niche specialists, such as basic contract work and document discovery. Although this will inevitably lead to a loss of some types of jobs, it will also mean a return to law as a genuinely intellectual pursuit. “Lawyers will be hired for more complex matters, such as tax structuring, rather than routine things such as forming a company,” predicts Mr Silberman.

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