join now
newsletters
topics
topics
advertise with us ABA Journal Blawg 100 Award 2009 ABA Journal Blawg 100 Award 2008
Subscribe (RSS Feed)TechnoLawyer Feed

Top Ten Legal Technology Innovations

By Neil J. Squillante | Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Given that it's Thanksgiving, I thought I'd create a top ten list of legal technology innovations for which law firms are thankful. I've listed these in no particular order as they're all important. Please let me know if you agree or disagree.

10. Mobile Communication: The ability to communicate via e-mail or telephone from practically anywhere using a relatively small device.

9. Scanners + PDF + Hard Drives: The ability to stop using expensive office space to store paper files. Law firms can now put that space to better use or lease less office space.

8. Online Legal Research: The same as #8 regarding space formerly used for a library.

7. Document Management: The ability to find all the files you now store electronically — not to mention the files that you create on your computer.

6. E-mail: It's probably impossible to practice law nowadays without e-mail. As an aside, kudos to FedEx for reinventing itself. Lesser companies would have shriveled with the loss of so much business to the double whammy of fax and e-mail.

5. Case Management: Your entire practice accessible in one place, including e-mail. Nothing more need be said.

4. Legal Accounting Software: Thanks to retainers, hourly billing, etc., even the smallest law firm has more complex accounting needs than larger businesses in other fields.

3. Live Spell Checking: Remember the days of having to run a spell checker every time you made a change to a document? Yes, it makes me shudder too.

2. Litigation Support Tools: Another bad memory — all the dusty bankers boxes of discovery documents I used to have in my office. For large cases, these boxes took up entire conference rooms — talk about a waste of space! The ability to store all this information electronically, quickly pull and print documents for depositions, etc., and then discard those documents knowing that you can print them again anytime has made life as a young associate so much better! The same goes for transcripts, case analysis outlines, trial presentations, and much more. (Can you tell that I really dislike paper?)

1. VoIP: Probably the most controversial entry on this list, I include it not because it has become widely adopted, but because it should. There's no good reason to pay traditional telephone rates anymore.

What do you think of my list?

About TechnoEditorials
A TechnoEditorial is the vehicle through which we opine and provide tips of interest to managing partners, law firm administrators, and others in the legal profession. TechnoEditorials appear first in TechnoGuide, and later here in TechnoLawyer Blog. TechnoGuide, which is free, also contains exclusive content. You can subscribe here.

Topics: Technology Industry/Legal Profession | TL Editorial
 
home my technolawyer search archives place classified blog login