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SmallLaw: TechShow 2009: A Decade Under the Influence Plus Best of Show Picks

By Mazyar Hedayat | Monday, April 13, 2009

SmallLaw Blog 04-13-09450

Originally published on April 13, 2009 in our free SmallLaw newsletter.

The 2009 ABA Technology Show is over. As usual, it started Thursday and wound up Saturday with the celebrated 60 Sites in 60 Minutes. Predictably, the atmosphere was part lecture-hall, part trade-show, mostly meet-and-greet.

This was my tenth year attending and in that time I've enjoyed the show as a spectator, an exhibitor, a blogger, and, most recently, a columnist.

I've seen trends take shape and fade, witnessed "revolutionary" changes (that weren't), and took careful note of which vendors stuck and which ones were one-hit wonders. Below you'll find my observations on this year's show.

Still Crazy After All These Years …

TechShow is still:

  • Produced by a volunteer board of lawyers, consultants, and ABA staff under the umbrella of the Law Practice Management section.

  • An opportunity for attendees to network face to face rather than just via email or telephone.

  • The premier national venue for startups to debut and established vendors to introduce products.

  • A forum about technology concerns of the day — PC versus Mac, email security, Twitter, eDiscovery (the 800 pound gorilla).

  • The best opportunity that attendees will have all year to preview technology that will shape the profession; and

  • Dependent on perennial sponsors like LexisNexis and Westlaw.

Given the diverse forces that bring the show to life every year, it's impressive that the whole production comes to us without major snafus. This year was no exception, and saw the return of the concierge desk manned by members of the Blawgerati, including Adriana Linares, Kevin O'Keefe, Dennis Kennedy, and Tom Mighell (last year's chair of the planning committee). It's good to know there are some things you can count on. Then again ...

Shrinkage …

The standard elements of a successful show existed this year, including:

  • Star bloggers (everyone was taking video).
  • Celebrity authors flogging their latest books.
  • Vendors connecting with big money accounts.
  • Startups vying for attention and coverage.
  • Educational sessions with national experts.
  • Chotchkies-a-plenty (my personal favorite).

But there was a distinct difference as well — let's call it shrinkage. And no element was spared. Consider that:

  • Even deep-pocketed vendors like Wolters Kluwer and Kroll Ontrack were absent.

  • Many regulars simply did not make an appearance at all or kept a very low profile.

  • Vendor participation appeared to be around 50% lower than last year.

The upshot is that although the show floor at the Hilton is smaller than the spread at the Sheraton where the show took place for years, there still weren't enough vendors to fill the space. Why not? The implosion of high-profile law firms? Pervasiveness of attorney joblessness? Ripple-effect of recent events on Wall Street? Maybe — but then again, why would that stop a vendor if the need for their products existed? That's the real question.

My Second Annual Best of Show Picks …

Sure the current economic trough affected TechShow. But why stop there? The collapse of the housing and financial services markets has also left lawyers with fewer opportunities than they've had in years and forced them to meet unprecedented demands. In short, it has created an opportunity for lawyers to break with past practices, leverage their knowledge, collaborate, and streamline the way they work.

You could even say that the current recession has created the perfect opportunity for lawyers to use technology to solve their problems. Or at least we could say that if the vendors at the show delivered innovation instead of overpriced me-too products.

Don't get me wrong. It wasn't all bad. But honestly, how many eDiscovery ads do you see per week and how many vendors can the market handle? The overabundance of eDiscovery companies can be extended to nearly every category of exhibitors at the show. So it's no surprise that my picks for "Best of Show" were companies that brought real value to the table in four emerging fields.

1. Web-Based Practice Management: Clio

Both of the primary contenders in this space were at the show — Themis Solutions' Clio and Rocket Matter — and both get the job done. But in the end Clio brings more polish to its product in my opinion.

Built in Ruby on Rails (geeky but important), Clio looks familiar, is easy to master, and is effective even for a sole practitioner — yet it can handle hundreds of users without sacrificing security or functionality. Clio introduced offline functionality at TechShow as well, so that even when the Internet is down the application can keep time then re-synchronize itself as soon as you're online. The Clio practice management suite also allows users to collaborate securely with clients.

Clio's pricing makes it an ideal entry-level solution for displaced biglaw associates now starting their own solo careers (BigSolos as my fellow SmallLaw columnist Ross Kodner refers to them).

For more on Clio, please watch my video interview of Themis Solutions' co-founder Jack Newton.

2. Automated Backup and Storage: Mozy

I couldn't blame you for skipping this section. How boring is storage, right? Everyone knows you can buy enough storage to hold every fact ever known for practically nothing. So why even discuss storage? Because reliability and access remain the twin holy grails of this field — and you can't expect either from small companies no matter how innovative.

Let's face it: size matters. So it's no wonder that my Best of Show pick in this category is Mozy. This company with the catchy name is really the cuddly face of EMC Documentum, a company that knows security and storage better than practically anyone. Because of EMC's size and deep pockets, Mozy can give away gigabytes of storage for free even before it begins charging. Even then its plans are accessible to pretty much anyone — users pay a small price per computer per month, plus 50 cents/gigabit/month thereafter. Yeah, I'll take that deal.

3. Managed Law Office Services: Total Attorneys

There was only one managed services vendor at TechShow — luckily it would be a good choice even among competitors. Total Attorneys represents an idea whose time has come.

Like Mozy, it sells just enough at a price that is just right. Services include a full complement of administrative tasks that lawyers traditionally suck at: business development, call centers, back-office work, follow up, etc.

There is a catch however — buying managed services means paying retail. And the retail price of these services includes labor, materials, profit, overhead, shipping, taxes, lunch for the crew ... you get the idea. At the end of the day, lawyers often live on a thin slice of profit. Giving that away may not represent a viable long-term strategy. Still, outsourcing may be the only strategy that works for many sole practitioners.

4. Automated Activity Tracking: WorkTRAKR

I really believe that WorkTRAKR, the automated time-keeping application from VoIP provider Proximiti, has potential. The application is a winner even with its built-in limitations. For instance, it works primarily on telephones and email, entirely missing faxes, computer applications, and a number of other billing sweet-spots. But the company is moving in the right direction and the product shows promise. It is Web-based now and works via plug-ins with such standards as Outlook. With some tweaking, WorkTRAKR might actually take some of the drudgery out of billing. We can only hope.

Wrapping It Up …

In the last ten years, TechShow has showcased a number of prodigious advancements in technology. Chief among these has been the transformation of the Internet from a world-wide billboard to a research pipeline and, more recently, to a comprehensive practice solution.

TechShow 2009 gave us still more evidence that anywhere, anytime law practice has arrived. Chances are that next year's show will bring a spate of me-too Web-based practice management vendors, followed by the inevitable shakeout and acquisitions by larger players. I only hope that the best companies make the cut — and the entrepreneurs who founded them don't cut and run after cashing out. Here's hoping that the next ten years are as groundbreaking as the last ten were.

Photo by Adriana Linares, LawTech Partners

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 | Backup/Media/Storage | Business Productivity/Word Processing | CLE/News/References | Law Office Management | Online/Cloud | Practice Management/Calendars | SmallLaw | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | Trade Show Reports

My Law Firm Is Better Than Yours Plus 54 More Links

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, February 23, 2009

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 44 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

InsideLegal's LegalTech Report (Including TL Party Photos)

With Whom Do You Compete? Using Competitive Intelligence

Law Firm Video Tips: Keep it Short and Use a Creative Title

This issue also contains links to every article in the February 2009 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: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | TechnoLawyer | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | Trade Show Reports

Live From the TechnoLawyer Party: Mobile Legal Apps

By Sara Skiff | Monday, February 9, 2009

TechnoEditorial 02-09-09

We would like to thank the 102 people who braved the snow on February 3, 2009 to attend the TechnoLawyer Party (2009 Edition) in New York City. We'll have photos and a more detailed report on the festivities soon.

In the meantime, I'd like to share with you a short video interview of TechnoLawyer publisher Neil Squillante that was filmed just as our party was getting underway by West's senior communications specialist Angelique Schaffer and posted on West's Westblog. Angie was joined by Scott Augustin, West's director of communications. (You can see Angie, Scott, and Neil from left to right in the above photo.)

In the video below, Neil discusses one of his top five 2009 predictions for the legal profession — robust legal applications for next-generation smartphone platforms like the iPhone, BlackBerry Storm, and Palm Pre. Neil discussed this prediction and others in greater detail in his recent article, TechnoLawyer's 2009 Legal Industry Predictions.

Transcript
What's the top legal tech trend for 2009?

Earlier this year I published an article with my top five predictions for 2009. I think one of the biggest is going to be the development, the explosion really, of mobile applications for lawyers. With the advent of the iPhone, the BlackBerry, the next version of Windows Mobile, Google's operating system for telephones, I think that's probably going to be the big story this year, although it may take till the end of the year for us to really start to see it gestate.

Why?

Well lawyers have always been pretty mobile, and while they've always been described as technology laggards, the one thing that lawyers really adapted to very early and quickly were these mobile smartphones like BlackBerrys, Treos, iPhones, etc. The fact that you can now almost do anything that you can do in your office on these phones, particularly with these rich applications that are coming out, will change the way lawyers work and make their lives a lot better actually. They won't have to go back to their office after court, for example, to do something. They can get it done right there and then go home.

About TechnoEditorials
A TechnoEditorial is the vehicle through which we opine and provide tips of interest to lawyers, law office administrators, and others in the legal profession. We link to each new TechnoEditorial and dozens of other articles on the legal Web each week in our BlawgWorld newsletter, which is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Email/Messaging/Telephony | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | TechnoLawyer | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | TL Editorial | Trade Show Reports | Videos

Florida Bar Scandal Plus 39 More Articles

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, February 2, 2009

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 40 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

Twittering the LegalTech Trade Show

Billable Hours Giving Ground at Law Firms

How Proskauer Rose Capitalized on the Madoff Scandal

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 | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | Trade Show Reports

ABA TECHSHOW 2008: Read Our Exclusive Firsthand Reports

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, March 24, 2008

Intro450

You hear a lot these days about people live-blogging trade shows and other events. But with few exceptions live blogging (perhaps we lawyers should call it realtime blogging) fails because quality writing takes time. It's sort of like the speed of light or the force of gravity. There's just no getting around it.

So when we began discussing how to cover ABA TECHSHOW 2008, we nixed the idea of live-blogging this important event. Instead, we decided to publish reports as quickly as possible while maintaining high standards. Call it retrospective blogging. Or just call it good reporting.

But don't worry. We're done! Below you'll find our complete coverage of ABA TECHSHOW 2008 — 13 reports. If you're still hungry for even more coverage, you'll also find links to 33 additional reports in other publications.

Crazy Mazy ...
Trade shows are unpredictable. Whenever you bring together thousands of smart, free-thinking people, sparks will fly. So who better to cover ABA TECHSHOW than our most unpredictable TechnoLawyer correspondent and the ultimate free thinker — Mazyar Hedayat. Or as we call him, Crazy Mazy, a name inspired by Apple's famous Think Different ad campaign about free thinkers, which begins, "Here's to the the crazy ones." When he's not reporting on trade shows, Mazy practices law in Bolingbrook, Illinois.

TechnoLawyer's ABA TECHSHOW 2008 Reports ...
Mazyar Hedayat, I Attended ABA TECHSHOW 2008 and All I Got Was This Lousy Blog Post

Mazyar Hedayat, Eliminating the Paper Chase: From Boxes to Bytes (Paperless Office Track)

Mazyar Hedayat, A Real World EDD Motion Hearing (Litigation Track)

Mazyar Hedayat, The Mobile Office: Take Your Desktop in Your Pocket (Mobile Technology Track)

Mazyar Hedayat, Outlook Tips and Tricks (Roundtables Track)

Mazyar Hedayat, So You Want to Be an ABA Author? (Special Session)

Mazyar Hedayat, Beating the Startup Blues: A Tech Survival Guide (Solo/Small Firm II Track)

Mazyar Hedayat, Grand Finale: 60 Sites In 60 Minutes

Mazyar Hedayat, Crazy Mazy's Best of Show: SQ Global Solutions

Mazyar Hedayat, Crazy Mazy's Best of Show: Legal Bar by BEC Legal Systems

Mazyar Hedayat, Crazy Mazy's Best of Show: Electronic Discovery

Mazyar Hedayat, Crazy Mazy's Best of Show: Adobe Acrobat Professional

Mazyar Hedayat, A Report from the Exhibit Hall and Suggestions for TechShow 2009

Other ABA TECHSHOW 2008 Reports

Brett Burney, Tips and Tricks at the ABA TechShow 2008, Law.com

Jim Calloway, Law Practice Tips From ABA TECHSHOW 2008, Jim Calloway's Law Practice Tips Blog

Jim Calloway, More Law Practice Tips From ABA TECHSHOW 2008, Jim Calloway's Law Practice Tips Blog

Jim Calloway, ABA TECHSHOW 2008 Wrap Up, Jim Calloway's Law Practice Tips Blog

Rob La Gatta, Brett Burney of Burney Consultants and ediscoveryinfo, Real Lawyers Have Blogs

Rob La Gatta, Adriana Linares of LawTech Partners, Real Lawyers Have Blogs

Rob La Gatta, Live from TechShow: Jim Calloway of the Oklahoma Bar Association, Real Lawyers Have Blogs

Rob La Gatta, Live from TechShow: Aviva Cuyler of JD Supra, Real Lawyers Have Blogs

Rob La Gatta, Live from TechShow: Ed Poll of LawBiz Management Co., Real Lawyers Have Blogs

Rob La Gatta, Live from TechShow: Laura Calloway of the Alabama State Bar, Real Lawyers Have Blogs

Rob La Gatta, Live from TechShow: David Cowen of The Cowen Group, Real Lawyers Have Blogs

Rob La Gatta, Live from TechShow: Brian Ritchey of LexisNexis, Real Lawyers Have Blogs

Mike McBride, ABA Techshow Day 3 Session 1, The Many Faces of Mike

Mike McBride, TechShow Day 3 Session 2: Automated Documents, The Many Faces of Mike

Mike McBride, A few Final TechShow Thoughts, The Many Faces of Mike

Greg Siskind, Lawyering in the Connected World: How to Snag the Connected Client, Greg Siskind's Blog

Sharon Nelson, ABA TECHSHOW Day Two: The Most Damning Thing Is the Hole Where Evidence Used to Be, Ride the Lightning

Sharon Nelson, Bank Secrecy Act Guns Down Sheriff of Wall Street, Ride the Lightning

Dominic Jaar, Todd Flaming and Brett Burney on Small Volume E-Discovery, Wines and Information Management

JoAnna Forshee, Just in Time for ABA TechShow/LMA Annual Conference: How to Measure Trade Show Return on Investment (ROI), Inside Legal

JoAnna Forshee, ABA TechShow Wrap-Up, InsideLegal

JoAnna Forshee, ABA TechShow Media Panel Publication Profiles, InsideLegal

Jordan Furlong, Takeaways from TechShow, Law21

Ben Stevens, Reflections on TechShow 2008, The Mac Lawyer

Allison C. Shields, Making Connections at ABA TechShow 2008, Legal Ease Blog

Monica Bay, Live from Chicago: ABA TECHSHOW, The Common Scold

Dennis Kennedy, I am the Worst Liveblogger Ever: A Report from ABA TECHSHOW 2008, DennisKennedy.blog

Reid Trautz, ABA TechShow 2008 Keynote Discusses Privacy Issues, Reid My Blog

Kevin A. Thompson, TechShow 2008: In Progress Report, Cyberlaw Central

Kevin A. Thompson, TechShow 2008: Day 2: In Progress Report, Cyberlaw Central

Brian J. Ritchey, First Day at ABA TechShow, More Partner Income

Kevin O'Keefe, Back in Seattle from ABA TechShow, Real Lawyers Have Blogs

Brian J. Ritchey, For Long Term Increases To Income, Partners Must Delegate Work, More Partner Income

Photo by Adriana Linares, LawTech Partners

About TechnoLawyer Trade Show Reports
Even in today's wired world, trade shows continue to play an important role. But not everyone can attend trade shows. Hence, our trade show reports, which bring trade shows to you. You can find our trade show reports here in TechnoLawyer Blog, and also in TechnoGuide, a free newsletter that also contains exclusive content. Learn more about TechnoGuide.

Topics: CLE/News/References | TechnoLawyer | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | Trade Show Reports

ABA TECHSHOW 2008: Grand Finale: 60 Sites In 60 Minutes

By Mazyar Hedayat | Monday, March 24, 2008

13450

Presenters: Tom Mighell & Friends
Saturday, March 15 at 11:00 am

In addition to being a perennial favorite among both attendees and speakers, this TechShow staple is a great opportunity for the crowd to let its collective hair down and enjoy an often irreverent, free-form look at the Internet for lawyers.

This year was no exception as TechShow chairman Tom Mighell and colleagues took to the dais and led us all a journey of self-discovery and good fun. Of course your humble reporter was bushed by then so I just sat back and enjoyed the show.

Of the 60 sites, below you'll find my favorite 8 in no particular order plus 2 that I would have included:

1. More Partner Income

This site is largely acknowledged to be where the rubber meets the road in terms of law as a business and business as a way of life.

2. Yahoo! Mobile WiFi

Find WiFi hotspots nearby. If like me you want to be connected constantly, keep this site on your radar.

3. Acrobat for Legal Professionals

Rick Borstein's blog about all things Acrobat for the law office is a must-read.

4. Planet PDF

When just one know-it-all site isn't enough, turn to this bulletin board forum where you might find for instance that you're not the only one who thought the "tab" button on your keyboard would order you a soda ... or who had a particular PDF question. Same difference.

5. TechnoLawyer

I think it's a great resource. No bias here. Plus they get some incredible writers to contribute ...

6. Dodgeball

Dodgeball was among the poster-children of the early Web 2.0 movement. The speakers agreed this site is great for reaching people with text messages when they get near a given location.

7. Lifehacker

This site is just what you would guess: a remedy for what ails you. It also represents the pinnacle of "giving it away" when it comes to really useful information. Try to find something software-related that it doesn't address.

8. Google (including Google Docs, Google Calendar, Gmail, Goog411, etc., etc., etc.)

There is absolutely nothing I can add here that hasn't been written to death ... except maybe this:

• Nearly every aspect of the Google Office Suite is in the throes of being upgraded and improved on a constant basis.

• When I remember how Google Docs drew "oohs" and "aahs" at last year's TechShow it blows my mind to hear it tossed out in such a matter of fact manner as a viable office suite. What's the world coming to?

Not mentioned but worthy of a bookmark:

9. Skype

Need to make a call where there isn't any phone service? Skype plus your wireless modem is the answer. Case closed.

10. Twitter

Twitter asks that you answer the question "What are you doing?" Respond in 140 characters or less and you're twittering. Join thousands around the world doing the same or keep the conversation private. It's a combination SMS system, social network, and cultural phenomenon.

Update: ABA has published the official version of 2008's 60 Sites in 60 Minutes.

Read more firsthand reports from ABA TechShow 2008.

About TechnoLawyer Trade Show Reports
Even in today's wired world, trade shows continue to play an important role. But not everyone can attend trade shows. Hence, our trade show reports, which bring trade shows to you. You can find our trade show reports here in TechnoLawyer Blog, and also in TechnoGuide, a free newsletter that also contains exclusive content. Learn more about TechnoGuide.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | CLE/News/References | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Online/Cloud | TechnoLawyer | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | Trade Show Reports

ABA TechShow 2008: Crazy Mazy's Best of Show: Adobe Acrobat Professional

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, March 24, 2008

Back to the Future: Adobe Acrobat Still Kicks [Redacted]

Adobe's booth was one of the first on the exhibit floor, but that's not why I stopped there, tired feet notwithstanding. Nor does that explain why I anointed Acrobat 8 Professional with a Best of Show.

What did convince me to spend a moment at the Acrobat booth was that in one fell swoop I was able to chat with Adobe rock star Rick Borstein and check out the classic Lawyer's Guide to Adobe Acrobat written by TechShow stalwart David Masters.

Though no longer a spring chicken, Acrobat 8 Professional continues to rule the document world. With its commenting, communication, collaboration, Bates stamping, and redaction features, as well as its conversion and search functions, Acrobat 8 Professional isn't just good, it's crazy good.

Read more firsthand reports from ABA TechShow 2008.

About TechnoLawyer Trade Show Reports
Even in today's wired world, trade shows continue to play an important role. But not everyone can attend trade shows. Hence, our trade show reports, which bring trade shows to you. You can find our trade show reports here in TechnoLawyer Blog, and also in TechnoGuide, a free newsletter that also contains exclusive content. Learn more about TechnoGuide.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Trade Show Reports

ABA TECHSHOW 2008: Crazy Mazy's Best of Show: Electronic Discovery

By Mazyar Hedayat | Monday, March 24, 2008

It's a Tie: Clustify and Kroll Ontrack

It's hard to pick one Best of Show in a category like electronic discovery in which the vendors outnumber the attendees. Okay maybe that's a slight exaggeration but the number of electronic discovery vendors significantly outnumbered vendors in any other category. Among the many contenders, I tip my virtual hat to a pair of companies that represent opposite (but equally important) extremes in this space.

Hot Neuron announced the release of Clustify, which uses both concept and literal search paradigms to eliminate "near duplicates" (a hot topic nowadays) and extract meaning from reams of eDiscovery information. The resulting output is displayed in "clusters" of related documents. Pricing is flexible as well.

Clustify exemplifies the trend towards keeping applications light and simple. Hence it runs on anything from a laptop to a server without sacrificing its raison d'etre — finding and sorting information.

Kroll Ontrack has gotten eDiscovery right as well. But if Clustify demonstrates what a lightweight, focused application can do, Kroll shows us that keeping a hand in multiple areas does not doom a company's products to mediocrity.

Born out of the insurance industry, Kroll has become a major player in the eDiscovey space by combining homegrown technology with strategic acquisitions. Its lineup includes software, search, and consulting.

Honorable Mention: Discover-e's Endeavour. Look for detailed coverage of these and other eDiscovery products in TechnoLawyer NewsWire.

Read more firsthand reports from ABA TechShow 2008.

About TechnoLawyer Trade Show Reports
Even in today's wired world, trade shows continue to play an important role. But not everyone can attend trade shows. Hence, our trade show reports, which bring trade shows to you. You can find our trade show reports here in TechnoLawyer Blog, and also in TechnoGuide, a free newsletter that also contains exclusive content. Learn more about TechnoGuide.

Topics: Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | Trade Show Reports

ABA TECHSHOW 2008: Crazy Mazy's Best of Show: Legal Bar by BEC Legal Systems

By Mazyar Hedayat | Monday, March 24, 2008

Microsoft Office Extenders (Cheapskate's Delight)

Legalbar

Who says my Best of Show picks need to be edgy and sexy? Consider Legal Bar, an add-on for Microsoft Word and Outlook from BEC Legal Systems.

Legal Bar occupies a thimble of space on your hard drive, but does something every lawyer can appreciate — it puts a law-centric faceplate on two of the most ubiquitous programs in the office.

But rather than wasting space here talking about all the features you can read about at the company's Web site, let me just point out that while watching a demo I must have thought to myself "I should have thought of that" or "I've wanted to do that for years" about a dozen times. And since Legal Bar costs about $160, I'm out of reasons not to incorporate it into my practice.

Overall, Legal Bar represents a clever concept executed well and priced right. It's win-win. Legal Bar works with Office 2003 and Office 2007.

Read more firsthand reports from ABA TechShow 2008.

About TechnoLawyer Trade Show Reports
Even in today's wired world, trade shows continue to play an important role. But not everyone can attend trade shows. Hence, our trade show reports, which bring trade shows to you. You can find our trade show reports here in TechnoLawyer Blog, and also in TechnoGuide, a free newsletter that also contains exclusive content. Learn more about TechnoGuide.

Topics: Business Productivity/Word Processing | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | Trade Show Reports | Utilities

ABA TECHSHOW 2008: Crazy Mazy's Best of Show: SQ Global Solutions

By Mazyar Hedayat | Monday, March 24, 2008

Legal Outsourcing Moves Beyond Document Review

Remember the early 1990s when outsourcing didn't apply to lawyers? Well you can forget those days because for the last decade outsourcing has become the name of the game for large discovery projects.

The theory is that firms shouldn't pay for an associate or paralegal here when they can have documents reviewed for less overseas. But where were all the legal process outsourcing (LPO) vendors at this year's show? Only one made the trip — SQ Global Solutions.

Of course it would be unfair to award one of my coveted Best of Show picks for that reason alone, so I spoke at length with company representative Tim Ninowski.

After many probing questions, I believe these guys have what it takes. Not only can they provide an instant discovery and document review department for law firms in need of manpower, but they have actually developed a lawyer ecosystem in their facility in Hyderabad, India.

The notion appears to be that if SQ Global Solutions nurtures an entire law firm (not just individual lawyers) overseas then it can handle nearly any size job on a temporary or long-term basis. In addition, the company provides services at a fraction of the cost of a full-time stateside associate or paralegal.

Yeah, it's kind of scary, but there's no point in burying our heads in the sand.

Read more firsthand reports from ABA TechShow 2008.

About TechnoLawyer Trade Show Reports
Even in today's wired world, trade shows continue to play an important role. But not everyone can attend trade shows. Hence, our trade show reports, which bring trade shows to you. You can find our trade show reports here in TechnoLawyer Blog, and also in TechnoGuide, a free newsletter that also contains exclusive content. Learn more about TechnoGuide.

Topics: Litigation/Discovery/Trials | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | Trade Show Reports
 
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