A lawyer has to stay current on legislative changes, case law and legal doctrine. In practice, this watch often falls by the wayside : drowned under client files and hearings.
The cost of manual monitoring
Monitoring official legal sources, appeals court rulings, doctrinal publications : it's serious work that requires at least 2 to 3 hours per week to be done properly. Hours most lawyers don't have.
The consequence: you miss a reform, you discover a shift in case law mid-matter, you lose credibility with your client.
AI as your monitoring partner
An automated intelligence system scans the relevant sources for each practice area: corporate law, employment law, commercial litigation. It filters the noise, extracts the essentials, and delivers a synthetic briefing each week.
Not a generic summary : a briefing targeted at your areas of expertise, with full references and practical implications.
The format that works
A weekly email, always at the same time. Five sections maximum. Each item in three lines: what changed, why it matters, what to do. Links to sources. Reading time: 3 minutes.
What it changes for a firm
The firm gains responsiveness toward its clients. It can alert them proactively about developments that affect them : before they even ask. That's a powerful retention lever.