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Here Comes Outlook 2013 Plus 129 More Must-Reads

By Kathryn Hughes | Thursday, July 19, 2012

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 120 articles from the past week worthy of your attention. Below you'll find a sample article from each section of today's issue, including our BlawgWorld Pick of the Week.

Sneak Peek at Microsoft Office 2013

All Computers Are Compromised, Not Just the iPad

Not Your Father's Law Firm

Tech Savvy Lawyers Better Poised to Experience Growth

Congratulations to Peter Bright of Ars Technia on winning our BlawgWorld Pick of the Week award: Don't Look Now but Here Comes Outlook 2013

Today's issue also contains links to every article in the July 2012 issue of Law Practice Today. Don't miss today's issue or any future issues of BlawgWorld.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. BlawgWorld enables you to stay on top of all the noteworthy articles (and podcasts) published online without having to hire a research assistant. Even when you're busy, you won't want to miss each issue's Pick of the Week. The BlawgWorld newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Legal Research

The iPad Keyboard Gets Physical Plus 107 More Must-Reads

By Kathryn Hughes | Monday, July 9, 2012

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 108 articles from the past week worthy of your attention. Below you'll find a sample article from each section of today's issue, including our BlawgWorld Pick of the Week.

Review: Daylite 4 in a Law Practice

Can You Use the Same Power Adapter for iPhone and iPad?

Five Rules for Managing Law Firm Projects

Why Your Web Designer Needs a Retina Macbook Pro

Congratulations to Business Insider on winning our BlawgWorld Pick of the Week award: Look What Just Surfaced: A Physical iPad Keyboard Overlay

Don't miss today's issue or any future issues of BlawgWorld.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. BlawgWorld enables you to stay on top of all the noteworthy articles (and podcasts) published online without having to hire a research assistant. Even when you're busy, you won't want to miss each issue's Pick of the Week. The BlawgWorld newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Legal Research

Tips Galore: Google Searches; Dual Monitor Size and Setup; Outlook Message Archiving

By Kathryn Hughes | Thursday, March 1, 2012

Today's issue of TL Answers contains these articles:

Jason Havens, Google and Google Scholar Search Tips

Marisa Zanini, Dual Monitors: Screen Size and Setup

Nancy Sween, Tip: Saving Client-Related Email in Microsoft Outlook

Don't miss this issue — or any future issues.

How to Receive TL Answers
Do you believe in the wisdom of crowds? In TL Answers, TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers. This newsletter's popularity stems from the relevance of the questions and answers to virtually everyone in the legal profession. The TL Answers newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Backup/Media/Storage | Coming Attractions | Document Management | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Legal Research | Monitors | TL Answers

The Latest Salvo in the Legal Research War Plus 131 More Must-Reads

By Kathryn Hughes | Monday, December 12, 2011

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 132 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

Lexis Advance: What Lexis Got Right

Will Tablets Replace Laptops?

An American Lawyer Goes Virtual From Canada

Making Your Blog Content More Shareworthy

Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Graphic Design/Photography/Video | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Legal Research

SmallLaw: Leveraging Technology to Run With the Big Boys and Ultimately Leave Them in the Dust

By Clark Stewart | Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Originally published on June 28, 2011 in our free SmallLaw newsletter. Instead of reading SmallLaw here after the fact, sign up now to receive future issues in realtime.

You've got a problem. A big problem. Literally. Large law firms differ from small law firms in one important way — money. They've got it. We don't. They can invest hundreds of thousands into ad campaigns. How nice. For those of us in the trenches, taking grenades from every high school booster ad campaign or restaurant menu designer, advertising is a little less glamorous. Sure we'd love a billboard on every corner and a thirty second spot during primetime, but the Benjamins just ain't there! So what's a small fish to do in a big pond? Quit looking at our small size as a weakness, and recognize our strengths instead! Here's how.

Use Your Non-Billable Time Productively

One area where the lack of size matters is overhead. A small firm could run indefinitely on a large firm's monthly operating budget. Large firms are particularly vulnerable here as they've grown so accustomed to branding campaigns, gourmet cafeterias, and other such amenities for so long that they can't imagine practicing without them. They should at least cut the crappachino machine. But they won't. Their loss, your gain.

Time is on our side. While silent phones are disheartening, realize that because the large firm across town is responding to client emergencies around the clock they don't have time to learn new tricks like how to optimize their Web site for Google, or how to institute a paperless office. They'll just pay the next SEO shark lying in wait for a sucker to swim by — and not get much value for the big bucks they spend.

With your down time, you've made your way through Stephan Spencer, Rand Fishkin, and Jessie Stricchiola's The Art of SEO: Mastering Search Engine Optimization and learned about backlinks, content management systems, keyword-laden URLs, title tags, and more. With the money you saved by going paperless you now have enough scratch to get your Web site up and running. While the large firm lawyer across town just spilled his non-soy low-fat double-caramel latte on his monogrammed custom shirt while reviewing his slam-dunk marketing bill, you just took first place for "Seattle personal injury lawyer" on Google ninja style!

How Technology Created a New Frontier for Small Firms

Technology enabled small law firms to evolve from the primordial soup of big city boutique and small town general practice firms into the next big thing in our industry — more variety than even Darwin could imagine, including virtual practices. (Our ailing economy and the abysmal job prospects for law school graduates have also helped usher in this new era.)

Ten years ago the sole practitioner was revered as a sad little being that either couldn't play nice with the other children or didn't have the grades to get a job in a boutique or large firm. Back then if you wanted to go solo it helped to have a rich relative, preferably deceased. It took money. In my dad's day an electric typewriter was high-tech and the price tag reflected it. A small firm had to weigh the benefits of technology versus its cost.

Today, cost and technology rarely come at odds (except perhaps for those just out of law school). The new cost-benefit analysis focuses on technology versus productivity with a little cost sprinkled on top. For example, if you want to go paperless, buy a scanner for $450ish. Couple your new scanner with Dropbox, or any of the other myriad cloud services, and you've just gone paperless. Now a box of paper will last months rather than days. You will consume ink or toner only for printing court exhibits. Your filing cabinets hit eBay, and you stop sending a monthly check to that offsite storage provider.

Technology also empowers your marketing as intimated above. Before the advent of WordPress you had to understand Web development code such as ASP.Net or PHP if you wanted to create and maintain more than a brochure site. It was tough to learn and expensive to outsource. We were at the mercy of Web designers.

But now that you can register a domain for $10 per year, find great hosting options for under $100 per year, and run WordPress using a professionally-designed theme (I use Headway Themes) to make your site pop, you've got no excuse whatsoever to ignore the trend in our profession.

And what is that trend? That potential clients use Google for everything. Studies show that most folks will search for something before they ask the person sitting next to them. These people are searching for doctors, electricians, and yes even lawyers. And they're looking for answers, not your curriculum vitae. Lawyers publishing articles answering these questions are killing their competition.

What's in My Small Firm Toolbox?

I run a paperless office with a scanner and Dropbox. I ditched the fax machine in favor of an online fax-to-email service. $10 a month. I run www.clarkstewartlaw.com using WordPress (free) hosted by Bluehost ($80/year) so I don't have to learn code.

As I discussed extensively in my last SmallLaw column, I use an iPad 2 to remain paperless while in court and for many other mobile tasks. I use Fastcase (free on iPad or iPhone) for legal research, and Google Calendar and Gmail. And thanks to a very gracious offer during a current family hardship I'm having my calls answered by a virtual receptionist via Ruby Receptionist to lighten my load.

I learned how to do all this by reading SmallLaw and TechnoLawyer's other newsletters (I was a fan before I became a columnist) as well legal blogs like iPhone J.D. and Legal Practice Pro. I joined every legal email listserver I could find such as the ABA's Solosez. I also joined my state's criminal defense lawyers group. I now have access to legal marketing, mentoring, and beneficial technology for nothing more than my time!

In short, if you are willing to learn, technology can elevate your practice, enabling you to offer incredible value, once only available from large firms, to your clients at a fraction of the cost, thus beating the big boys at their own game. When that large firm across town shuts its doors, you can buy its crappachino machine at a discount.

Written by Gadsden, Alabama lawyer Clark Stewart.

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: CLE/News/References | Document Management | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Legal Research | SmallLaw

PLC Labor & Employment: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Neil J. Squillante | Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Today's issue of TL NewsWire covers an online resource for employment law needs (see article below), a desktop search utility, software for making image-only documents searchable, an extranet add-on for Time Matters, and an iOS reading app. Don't miss the next issue.

Add a Team of Employment Lawyers to Your Firm With One Click

If your law firm represents businesses, you probably field lots of questions about employment law even if that's not your primary specialty. In the old days, a client would call you up, ask about an employment law issue, and gladly pay to have your firm research the answer. Or draft an agreement. Etc. Nowadays, they still ask such questions, but don't want to pay for time spent on ramp-up research or drafting a document from scratch. Small firms have it especially tough as they don't have the resources to write off research and lack a large library of "routine" model documents.

PLCLabor & Employment … in One Sentence
Practical Law Company's PLCLabor & Employment is an online service that provides employment law practice guides, model documents, state surveys, and more.

The Killer Feature
No request makes lawyers feel as conflicted as the multi-state survey. They're lucrative but involve a lot of mind-numbing research. And as noted above, clients no longer want to pay law firms to invent a wheel that they feel must already exist.

And in this case the wheel does indeed exist in the form of PLCLabor & Employment's State Q&A Tool. This database summarizes state laws on various topics such as anti-discrimination laws, background check laws, drug testing laws, hiring requirements, leave laws, non-compete laws, wage and hour laws, etc.

"PLC's State Q&A Tool, like all of our other resources, helps lawyers work efficiently so that they can focus more time on the higher-level advising that clients value most," Practical Law Company CEO Jeroen Plink told us.

Other Notable Features
PLCLabor & Employment also includes downloadable model documents in Microsoft Word format. You'll also find Practice Notes, which are how-to guides written in plain English. Think of them as roadmaps for practice. Topics include corporate transactions and bankruptcy, cross-border and immigration and employee data, and monitoring and privacy among others.

The service also saves you time on executive employment agreements with its What's Market tool that consists of data culled from agreements filed with the SEC. You can create custom trend reports using filters such as industry, market capitalization, and governing law. You can also browse agreements and compare provisions within agreements (280G, clawback, base salary, etc.).

What Else Should You Know?
A team of lawyers who previously worked at employment law powerhouses such as Jackson Lewis and Littler Mendelson create these materials. They also serve as your reference librarians. Tell them what you're working on and they will email you links to the applicable resources. You can try PLCLabor & Employment for free. The annual subscription provides unlimited use. Learn more about PLCLabor & Employment.

How to Receive TL NewsWire
So many products, so little time. In each issue of TL NewsWire, you'll learn about five new products for the legal profession. Pressed for time? The newsletter's innovative articles enable lawyers and law office administrators to quickly understand the function of a product, and zero in on its most important features. The TL NewsWire newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Automation/Document Assembly/Macros | Legal Research | TL NewsWire | Transactional Practice Areas

Don't Start a Law Firm Plus 119 More Must-Reads

By Kathryn Hughes | Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 86 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

Review of Lexis Advance

In Defense of the Stylus

How to Negotiate Fee Agreements

Year of the Law Firm Web Site Makeover?

This issue also contains links to every article in the November/December 2011 issue of Law Practice and the November issue of Law Practice Today. Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Graphic Design/Photography/Video | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Legal Research

Reviews of DS-5000, Jabra 9470, fi-6130 Scanner; Broadband2Go, Certificate of Service; DR-2300; Multiple Monitors

By Kathryn Hughes | Friday, September 23, 2011

Today's issue of TL Answers contains these articles:

Stephen Silverberg, Reviews Of Olympus DS-5000, Jabra 9470; Olympus DR-2300

Peter Pike, Multiple Monitors In A Litigation Practice

Fred Kruck, Review: Fujitsu Fi-6130 Scanner

Michael Karsch, Review: Virgin Mobile Broadband2Go And USB Adapter

Jill Michaux, Review: Certificate Of Service For Bankruptcy Mailings

Don't miss this issue — or any future issues.

How to Receive TL Answers
Do you believe in the wisdom of crowds? In TL Answers, TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers. This newsletter's popularity stems from the relevance of the questions and answers to virtually everyone in the legal profession. The TL Answers newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Dictation/OCR/Speech Recognition | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Gadgets/Shredders/Office Gear | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Legal Research | Monitors | TL Answers

Google Scholar Versus lexis.com and Westlaw; Reviews of PDF XChange Viewer, Ultramon, Snap, Winsplit

By Kathryn Hughes | Thursday, September 8, 2011

Today's issue of Answers to Questions contains these articles:

Richard Maseles, Review: Google Scholar As An Alternative To Lexis.com And Westlaw

David Garde, Review: PDF XChange Viewer

Andrew Weltchek, Multiple Monitor Utility Reviews: Ultramon, Snap, Winsplit Revolution

Don't miss this issue — or any future issues.

How to Receive Answers to Questions
Do you believe in the wisdom of crowds? In Answers to Questions, TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers. This newsletter's popularity stems from the relevance of the questions and answers to virtually everyone in the legal profession. The Answers to Questions newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Coming Attractions | Legal Research | Monitors | Online/Cloud | TL Answers

Lawyer Replaces Laptop With iPad; Windows 7 Rant; Annual Maintenance Plans; Law School

By Kathryn Hughes | Friday, September 2, 2011

Today's issue of Fat Friday contains these articles:

Andrew Weltchek, Why I Bought An IPad 2 Instead Of A Laptop Plus My Favorite Apps

Steven Schwaber, Windows 7 Rebuttal: The Redmond Emperor Has No Clothes

Joseph Marquette, Why Annual Maintenance Plans Are No Longer Optional

Leslie Shear, The Benefits Of Reading Literature In Law School

Don't miss this issue — or any future issues.

How to Receive Fat Friday
Our most serendipitous offering, Fat Friday consists of unsolicited contributions by TechnoLawyer members. You'll no doubt enjoy it because of its mix of interesting topics and genuinely useful knowledge, including brutally honest product reviews and informative how-tos. The Fat Friday newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | CLE/News/References | Coming Attractions | Consultants/Services/Training | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Entertainment/Hobbies/Recreation | Fat Friday | Gadgets/Shredders/Office Gear | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Legal Research | Networking/Operating Systems | Technology Industry/Legal Profession
 
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