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Hosted Exchange Review; Amicus Attorney Review; Time Matters Versus PracticeMaster; ISYS:desktop Pricing; Fax Machine Alternatives

By Sara Skiff | Friday, August 8, 2008

Coming August 14, 2008 to Answers to Questions: Edward Zohn reviews using Microsoft Exchange and BlackBerry Enterprise servers on a hosted basis (outsourced), W. James Slaughter reviews Amicus Attorney 7, Asa Kelley reviews Time Matters 7.0 and 9.0 as well as PracticeMaster/Tabs3, Ted Boxer shares his experience trying to obtain pricing information for ISYS:desktop (plus we have a response from ISYS), and Stephen Bird offers some advice for those still using a fax machine. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published Thursdays, Answers to Questions is a weekly newsletter in which TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers (including you if you join TechnoLawyer). Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Desktop PCs/Servers | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Networking/Operating Systems | Practice Management/Calendars | TL Answers

Novabrain Business Explorer 4.0: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire covers a document management application that doesn't require a database (see article below), a business intelligence program that analyzes your firm's financial data, and litigation support software that handles discovery documents and deposition transcripts as well as trial presentations. Don't miss the next issue.

A Place For Your Stuff
By Peter R. Olson

The late comedian George Carlin had a famous routine called "A Place For Your Stuff" in which he made many keen observations about our propensity to collect "stuff." Law firms, of course, are notorious for all the "stuff" they collect. These days, much of it is electronic, but many lawyers still can't find anything. As it turns out, we don't only need a place for our stuff. We also need a better way to manage it.

Novabrain Business Explorer 4.0 ... in One Sentence
Novabrain Technologies' Novabrain Business Explorer 4.0 enables you to better organize, find, and share structured and unstructured data such as contacts, events, email, documents, and more on your own computer and across your firm.

The Killer Feature
Unlike most document management systems, Novabrain Business Explorer does not use a database to store your data. Instead, it uses XML files either on your local hard drive or a file server. As a result, you don't need a technician to get up and running.

Also, you need not upload email and documents nor must you check them out. Instead, you store everything where you normally store it, the difference being that Novabrain Business Explorer keeps track it. Think of it like iTunes for your email and documents.

Other Notable Features
Novabrain Business Explorer integrates with Microsoft Office, bringing with it a true client/matter classification system as opposed to the nested folders in Windows that many law firms use. Thus, you can save email and documents into Novabrain's index automatically by client and matter so that you can easily search for and find them later. Novabrain Business Explorer also provides version tracking so that you can access all prior versions of a document.

Novabrain Business Explorer's search goes beyond the many free desktop search tools that exist thanks to its context search capabilities. For example, instead of simply searching for a keyword, you can search for attributes such as matter and date range to improve relevancy.

What Else Should You Know?
Novabrain comes in three versions — Free, Pro, and Enterprise. The Free version is for single users. The Pro and Enterprise editions include collaboration features and the ability to search across your firm. The Enterprise edition also includes document numbering, Microsoft SharePoint integration, and centralized administration and customization. The Pro version costs $199. The price of the Enterprise version depends on various factors. Learn more about Novabrain Business Explorer 4.0.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Document Management | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | TL NewsWire

Bates Stamp Strategies; Amicus Attorney Versus Prevail; DSS Versus MP3; Copernic Review; PaperPort Review

By Sara Skiff | Friday, July 25, 2008

Coming July 31, 2008 to Answers to Questions: Neil Packard shares tips for Bates stamping documents and explains which format generally works best for discovery documents, Francis Jackson compares Amicus Attorney to Prevail for practice management, Simon Berglund discusses the difference between MP3 and Digital Speech Standard (DSS) devices and how to choose between them, Kerry Hubick reviews Copernic Desktop Search, and Michael Markovitz reviews PaperPort, including how he uses it with his scanner. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published Thursdays, Answers to Questions is a weekly newsletter in which TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers (including you if you join TechnoLawyer). Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Dictation/OCR/Speech Recognition | Document Management | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Practice Management/Calendars | TL Answers

Windows on Mac Review; Netmass Review; Multiple Computers and Monitors; Amicus Attorney; Word 2007 Paste Special Macro

By Sara Skiff | Friday, July 18, 2008

Coming July 24, 2008 to Answers to Questions: Kevin Kirlin reviews his experience running Windows XP on a MacBook Pro, Ina Kay Zimmerman reviews Netmass for online backup, Ted Harper explains how to use multiple monitors with multiple computers (and why he still loves his old CRT), Nicholas Richter provides an update on his recent Question about whether he should upgrade to Amicus Attorney 2008, and Bertrand Zalinsky explains how to create a Paste Special macro in Word 2007. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published Thursdays, Answers to Questions is a weekly newsletter in which TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers (including you if you join TechnoLawyer). Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Automation/Document Assembly/Macros | Backup/Media/Storage | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Monitors | Networking/Operating Systems | Online/Cloud | Practice Management/Calendars | TL Answers

Amicus Mobile: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire covers a practice management application for Windows Mobile devices (see article below), software that enables law firms to offer financing to their clients, and a Web-based billing application. Don't miss the next issue.

Your Practice in Your Pocket
By Peter R. Olson

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The problem with being out of your office is being out of your office. Despite significant advances in smartphones and PDAs, their bundled applications lack the legal-specific functions of case management software. Gavel & Gown has responded to this problem with Amicus Mobile, an add-on to Amicus Attorney 2008 Premium Edition, its desktop case management software.

Amicus Mobile runs on Windows Mobile smartphones and PDAs. It offers two significant innovations — push synchronization and time capture.

It's hard to believe that synchronizing your smartphone with your PC using a cable once seemed revolutionary. Nowadays, it's a chore right up there with taking out the trash and doing laundry. Amicus Mobile eliminates the need for you to manually sync. Instead, it synchronizes automatically, instantaneously, and wirelessly over your carrier's cell phone network with your Amicus Attorney 2008 server.

For example, as soon as you record a time entry, enter a contact, write a note, create an appointment, etc. that same information appears in Amicus Attorney back in your office. Similarly, any changes made back in the office such as a corrected phone number appears instantly in Amicus Mobile on your Windows Mobile device.

Amicus Mobile also addresses another chore — time entry. Instead of making a phone call and then manually entering the time afterwards, Amicus Mobile asks you after each call if you would like to create a record of the call and optionally a time entry. Just click Yes or No, add a note if you wish, and you're done. Amicus Mobile already knows its duration and enters that information. You can exclude personal contacts such as your kids from these prompts, and all captured call records can later be reviewed and converted into time entries.

Amicus Mobile pretty much mirrors its desktop counterpart. You can access, modify, and create contacts, appointments, notes, tasks, call records, stickies, and time entries. You can even access your file index and basic file details. With stickies, you can exchange text messages with your staff and bypass the charges associated with SMS. Because Amicus Mobile uses ActiveSync, it also synchronizes with Outlook if you use that program (and who doesn't these days).

In addition to Amicus Attorney 2008 Premium Edition, Amicus Mobile requires Windows Mobile 5 or higher and Microsoft ActiveSync 4.5 or higher. Amicus Mobile costs $149 per license. Learn more about Amicus Mobile.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Online/Cloud | Practice Management/Calendars | TL NewsWire

SmallLaw: Value Billing a Great Value for Clients, Not Lawyers (Why This Piece Is So Late)

By Mazyar Hedayat | Thursday, June 26, 2008

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Originally published on June 23, 2008 in our free SmallLaw newsletter.

So June is nearly over and TechnoLawyer expects me to submit a piece every month ... starting in April. They don't call me "Crazy Mazy" for nothing (or at all). Sure I "think different" as the famous commercial goes, but that's the problem. Let me explain.

Think Different ... But Not Too Different

In case you want to begin innovating in the legal space, let me stop you right now. Challenging the status quo over the past few years has cost me relationships with my employees, clients, and colleagues.

For example, take my oft-stated disdain for the billable hour. So sure was I of my position that I decided to put my money where my mouth was and wean my office from the teat of this scourge. Despite scratching out a reputation as a respectable trial lawyer over 10 grueling years and making a passable living by billing clients, I switched to value billing (aka the flat fee) to deliver ... well, value.

My theory was that if I had already been paid, I could concentrate on the work. This new tack would require that I avoid litigation, which often amounts to a bottomless pit for time. I took the plunge, began to rid my schedule of litigation, and felt good about it right away. For a while.

First the Good News ...

At first it was exhilarating not having to spend days writing up billing every few weeks, and the time it freed up on a daily basis was a bonus. Nobody would have to watch the clock. We could focus on our work and clients could call when they needed us ... and they did. Morning, noon, and night.

But that wasn't all. Many came in complaining of one problem for a given fee, only to sneak in new, often unrelated problems. Try explaining that distinction in an engagement letter or trying to charge extra for services under that circumstance.

Worse still, the complaints didn't stop. Our fees were still too high for their taste. As if. Value billing drove down cash-flow, depleted my savings, and resulted in defections or resignations by employees. But the fun was just beginning.

The Beginning of the End of the Beginning ...

The next casualty in my war on convention was the ability to repay creditors on time. Having built up the office, hired, and entered into contracts with vendors based on a steady diet of labor-intensive, hourly litigation, the switch to such flat-fee standards as bankruptcy, real estate, and immigration was ... not smooth.

Soon we began defaulting on obligations and ordering less from suppliers. Next, our credit lines were shut down one after another. Without lines of credit, it became risky to hire suitable employees to replace those who had departed for fear of a cash crunch. But not content (or willing) to complete the backed up work by myself, I hired less qualified, less costly replacements. That didn't work either, and in the end I fired even those employees.

The cycle was complete and I was alone. I had not been without employees for 10 years, but in one fell swoop I had reversed all hints of progress, all in the name of a better way to bill.

Epilogue (Don't Try This At Home) ...

For the past four months I've been putting in 12 hour days, working 6 and 7 days a week without any associates or clerks (except for an intern who has little to offer in the way of practical help). Instead of finding new work though, I have to fix or complete projects my employees claimed to have completed over the past 9 months. Yes, 9 months.

Sure, my life sucks. But it sucks slightly less than it did when I was throwing away thousands of dollars on employees that couldn't get things right or screwed up so badly that it cost me more to complete the project than the job was worth in the first place. Nor was value billing the answer because, let's face it, flat fees are just a way of saying "Here I am, use me!" Clients respond to that like wolves to red meat.

In the end I miss the billable hour. I admit it. I was too hasty in dismissing it. In the future, I plan to return to the practice of billing my time, and God help the next client that asks for a flat fee or the next employee that says they can do something they can't. They won't find a home in my office.

Oh, and by the way ... that's why this piece is late.

Written by Mazyar M. Hedayat of M. Hedayat & Associates, P.C.

How to Receive SmallLaw
Small firm, big dreams. Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, SmallLaw provides you with a mix of practical advice that you can use today, and insight about what it will take for small law firms like yours to thrive in the future. The SmallLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Law Office Management | SmallLaw

Clustify: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Sara Skiff | Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Today's issue of TechnoLawyer NewsWire covers a document grouping application to expedite the early stages of discovery (see article below), a service that enables law firms to accept credit cards, and an online store that can digitize your old photos, film, records, video tapes, and more. Don't miss the next issue.

Group Therapy for Discovery Documents
By Peter R. Olson

Let's face it — having your most junior paralegal handle the first cut of documents in your cases is probably not a good idea. But who else higher up in your firm would volunteer for this critical but grueling chore? No one is the likely answer. You need someone like Mikey — that kid who hated everything except Life cereal or in your case document review. Good luck.

Instead of searching for someone who doesn't exist, Clustify from Hot Neuron can help you with this task. Clustify groups similar documents into groups or clusters, providing quick insight into the contents of each document set. These clusters enable you to make decisions one cluster at a time instead of one document at a time, streamlining the document review that you and your experienced personnel conduct after the initial cut.

Whether used in Clustify's own user interface or within your preferred document review platform, Clustify identifies document keywords and then groups documents by keyword sets. You can sort by specific keywords, phrases, or even long passages. Clustify labels a "representative document" for each cluster.

Clustify offers a number of review tools. For example, you can compare specific documents side-by-side with Clustify's document comparison tool. Clustify highlights the changes for you. Clustify also offers custom tagging to categorize documents as you review them. Apply a tag to a single document, all documents in a cluster, or all clusters containing a certain combination of keywords. You can tag hundreds of documents with a single mouse click and link documents to other documents. This automated categorization improves the quality of document review because you can assign related documents to a single reviewer instead of having reviewers skip from one topic to another.

Clustify supports most document formats you're likely to encounter, including PDF, Microsoft Office, WordPerfect and HTML. Clustify runs on Windows and Linux. Learn more about Clustify.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Wednesdays, TechnoLawyer NewsWire is a weekly newsletter that enables you to learn about new technology products and services of interest to legal professionals. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Backup/Media/Storage | Entertainment/Hobbies/Recreation | Law Office Management | Litigation/Discovery/Trials | TL NewsWire

Dragon Review; Trust Accounts in QuickBooks; OmniPage Pro Review; Clean Copy and Paste; Is the Customer Always Right?

By Sara Skiff | Friday, June 13, 2008

Coming June 19, 2008 to Answers to Questions: G. Blair McCune reviews Dragon NaturallySpeaking Preferred and Professional (and explains the difference between the two), Edward Zohn explains how he uses QuickBooks to handle trust accounts (without setting up a separate set of books), Peter Pike reviews OmniPage Pro for OCR and its Word/WordPerfect integration, Ed Walters shares his favorite way to copy and paste from Word to WordPerfect, and Brent Blanchard discusses legal research pricing and adhesion contracts. Don't miss this issue.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published Thursdays, Answers to Questions is a weekly newsletter in which TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers (including you if you join TechnoLawyer). Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Dictation/OCR/Speech Recognition | Legal Research | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | TL Answers

Review: Bill4Time: Web-Based Billing and Case Management

By Sara Skiff | Friday, June 13, 2008

Coming June 17, 2008 to TechnoFeature: Billing is one of the most important tasks a lawyer performs — and perhaps the most tedious. Desktop software has made this activity easier, but does an even better solution exist? In this article, legal technology consultant Caren Schwartz reviews Bill4Time, a Web-based time-billing solution. With Bill4Time, lawyers can bill their time and expenses anywhere they can access the Internet. That's the promise, but how does it perform in practice? Read Caren's in-depth review to find out.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Tuesdays, TechnoFeature is a weekly newsletter that contains in-depth articles written by leading legal technology and practice management experts. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Coming Attractions | Online/Cloud | TechnoFeature

Top 10 Risks of Poor Trust Accounting Practices and How to Avoid Them

By Sara Skiff | Friday, June 6, 2008

Coming June 10, 2008 to TechnoFeature: Does your firm follow the correct protocol when it comes to administering trust accounts? If you even have one lick of doubt, your firm could be at risk. In this article, consultant and trainer Beatriz Milia outlines the top ten reasons law firms need to maintain organized and accurate trust records. Do the words fine, lawsuit, disbarment, and jail send a shiver down your spine? Because ignorance of the law is no excuse, learn how these and other consequences can result from poor trust accounting practices. And more importantly, learn how to avoid them.

How to Receive this Newsletter
Published on Tuesdays, TechnoFeature is a weekly newsletter that contains in-depth articles written by leading legal technology and practice management experts. Like all of our newsletters, it's free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Coming Attractions | TechnoFeature
 
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