Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Scott Stevenson's avatar

Excellent read, agree with a lot of your points. We launched www.spellbook.legal last summer and have onboarded nearly 1000 law firms/solos onto the platform. We have very much taken a "lawyer-augmentation" approach like GitHub Copilot has for programmers. We are not so much an assistant or co-pilot, but a precision power tool that enables a lawyer to do bespoke tasks much more effectively. The feedback from our users has been incredible.

One trend we've noticed is that small firms are much, much more receptive to this. Many of them have been billing on a flat fee basis for years at this point, and they need all the help they can get to improve their margins. It is BigLaw hourly billing that is at stake, but literally 1000's of small firms/solos are adopting this technology en masse. This tech also makes it more viable to operate as a solo, since you would no longer need so many support staff.

Looking forward to reading more of your takes!

Expand full comment
Ernie the Attorney's avatar

If A.I. replaces lawyers I'm not sure anyone other than lawyers will care (which I say lovingly to my fellow lawyers because it's just true, even if we don't like to be believe that). 😏

Critical thinking will not be replaced by A.I. and most of what good lawyers do relies on this hard-to-develop skill. Here are the 3 levels of modern knowledge work in a nutshell:

1. Information & Data processing (low-level, automatable, increasingly harder to monetize, except at scale)

2. Pattern Recognition & Synthesizing of Information (mid-level for now, and also getting harder to monetize, especially now that GPT is rapidly developing)

3. Complex problem solving based on critical thinking (high-level and will be for a long time; lucrative and largely immune from large scale disruption)

Expand full comment
4 more comments...

No posts