This week on The Geek in Review podcast Marlene Gebauer and Greg Lambert featured guests Colin Levy, Ashley Carlisle, and Dorna Moini discussing Levy's recently published book "Handbook of Legal Tech." Levy edited the book and contributors included Moini, Carlisle's CEO, Tony Thai, and many more legal technology experts. The book provides an overview of key technologies transforming the legal industry like automation, AI, blockchain, document automation, CLM, and more.
Levy shared how he ended up editing the book, describing it as "herding cats" to get busy experts to contribute chapters. He wanted the book to serve as a comprehensive introduction to legal tech, with each chapter written by leaders in the various subject matter areas. Carlisle and Moini explained their motivations for taking time out of their demanding schedules to write chapters - spreading knowledge to help move the industry forward and impart insights from their work.
The guests reflected on their favorite parts of the experience. Levy enjoyed bringing together the community and seeing different perspectives. Carlisle appreciated being able to consolidate information on contract lifecycle management. Moini was proud to contribute right before having a baby. Lambert highlighted Levy juggling this book and writing his own solo book on legal tech stories from the front lines.
The guests offered advice to law students and lawyers looking to learn about and leverage legal tech. Carlisle emphasized starting with an open mind, intentional research, and reading widely from legal tech thought leaders. Moini recommended thinking big but starting small with iterative implementation. Levy stressed knowing your purpose and motivations to stay focused amidst the vast array of options.
Lambert prompted the guests to identify low-hanging fruit legal technologies those new to practice should focus on. Levy pointed to document automation and AI. Moini noted that intake and forms digitization can be a first step for laggards. Carlisle advised starting small with discrete tasks before tackling advanced tools.
For their forward-looking predictions, Carlisle saw AI hype fading but increasing tech literacy, Levy predicted growing focus on use and analysis of data as AI advances, and Moini forecasted a rise in online legal service delivery. The guests are excited about spreading awareness through the book to help transform the legal industry.
Haley Moss on How Embracing Neurodiversity in the Legal Profession Makes Us All Better
Cultivating and Retaining the Next Generation of Legal Talent
Alex Babin - Getting the Machines to Work the Way You Work
Matthew Coatney - The Human Cloud: The World of Projects and Freelancers
Results of the Bloomberg Law DEI Framework with Molly Huie
Teaching Law Students Business Design Skills - Jessica Erickson and Josh Kubicki
Ian Nelson, Sarah Glassmeyer, and Margaret Naughton on the Next Generation of CLE
The Legal Design Book with Astrid Kohlmeier and Meera Klemola
Innovation Adoption - The Law Firm Field of Dreams
Mary O'Carroll - The Power of Community in Driving Change
Zen and the Art of Process Improvement - Tiffany O'Neil, Alana Carson, and Jack Godsey
Joseph Raczynski - The Red and Blue Pill Matrix of AI and Emerging Legal Tech
April Brousseau - Innovation in the Legal Industry Can't Be a Side Gig
Leigh Vickery on Creating Top-Shelf Customer Experience in Legal
Shailini George on Law Students Doing Well and Being Well
Maya Markovich and Ivy Grey on Creating More Value with the Time You Have
Eugene Giudice on Reflections During a Pandemic
AALL's Emily Florio and Diane Rodriguez on Leading an Association Remotely
The Delta Model Lawyer with Cat Moon and Alyson Carrel
How COVID Changed Law Students' On Campus Interview Experiences with Law360's Kerry Benn
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The emPOWERed Half Hour
NABOR® TALKS
U.S Property Podcast
Aligned Money Show
The Ramsey Show
Planet Money