By Frank
Furness | Sales Trainer, Keynote Speaker & AI
Consultant
I was sitting in a law firm's reception in Singapore —
impressive marble floors, mahogany furniture, framed certificates on every wall
— waiting to speak to their partners about the future of business development.
The receptionist handed me a form to fill in. By hand. With a pen. I half
expected a quill.
Now, I'm not picking on that
particular firm — they were lovely people, and the coffee was excellent. But it
did strike me as slightly ironic that a profession built on precision,
intelligence, and staying one step ahead of everyone else was, in many places,
running on processes that hadn't changed since the invention of the filing
cabinet.
That was then. This is very
much now.
Artificial Intelligence has
arrived in the legal profession — not with a theatrical entrance, but with the
quiet efficiency of a very good paralegal who never sleeps, never bills by the
hour, and never makes you feel judged for asking a basic question. According to
research from Thomson Reuters, over 80% of legal professionals believe AI will
significantly reshape the profession within the next five years. Many already
have. The question isn't whether your firm should pay attention to AI. The
question is whether you want to be leading the charge or watching from the
pavement as your competitors drive past.
1. Legal Research That Doesn't Take
All Weekend
Ask any lawyer what eats most of
their billable hours and research usually features heavily. Sifting through
case law, statutes, precedents, and commentary is intellectually demanding work
— but let's be honest, it's also the kind of work that makes you question your
life choices at eleven o'clock on a Tuesday night.
AI tools like Lexis+ AI, Harvey
AI, and CoCounsel have changed the game significantly. Ask them a complex legal
question in plain English, and they'll return a summarised answer with relevant
citations in seconds. Not minutes. Seconds.
Lawyers using these platforms
are already able to:
•
Identify relevant precedents without wading through
hundreds of documents
•
Compare rulings across multiple jurisdictions quickly
•
Analyse potential legal arguments — and the other
side's counterarguments
•
Summarise lengthy judicial opinions in plain language
The result isn't just speed — it's better thinking. When you
spend less time hunting for information, you spend more time applying it.
That's where lawyers genuinely earn their fees.
|
FRANK'S QUICK TIP If
you're still spending hours on routine research, you're essentially billing
clients for something a machine can now do faster and cheaper. That's not a
business model — that's a countdown timer. Trial Harvey AI or CoCounsel on a
low-stakes matter this week. You'll be amazed. |
2. First Impressions Count — Even at
Midnight
Here's a scenario that plays out
hundreds of times a day. A potential client has just had an accident, received
a frightening letter from a landlord, or discovered something alarming in a
business contract. They're anxious. They want help. They go to your website at
9pm and... nothing. A contact form. Maybe a phone number. The digital
equivalent of a closed sign.
AI-powered chat tools integrated
into your firm's website can change that dynamic entirely. A well-designed AI
assistant can answer common questions, gather key details about the case, and
schedule a consultation — all before your staff have had their morning coffee.
The prospective client feels heard. You receive a qualified lead. Everyone
wins.
Some firms are also using AI to
draft initial email responses and summarise client conversations — keeping
communication professional, prompt, and consistent. Because in a world where
clients have options, the firm that responds first and communicates clearly
tends to win the instruction.
3. Document Drafting: The
Groundwork, Done Fast
Let me be clear about something.
AI is not going to replace the lawyer. It won't apply judgment, read the room
in a negotiation, or explain to a frightened client why the situation isn't as
catastrophic as it looks. Those things require human expertise, empathy, and
experience — ideally combined with a decent cup of tea.
What AI can do brilliantly is
the groundwork. Upload a contract and ask it to summarise obligations, flag
unusual clauses, or identify potential risks. Ask it to produce a first draft
of an NDA, an engagement letter, or a standard policy document. It won't be
perfect — nothing ever is on the first pass — but it gives a skilled lawyer
something solid to work from rather than starting from a blank page.
Think of it this way. A
surgeon doesn't prepare the operating theatre themselves. AI is doing the
preparation so the expert can focus on the operation.
|
FRANK'S QUICK TIP Next
time you have a routine document to draft, run the brief through ChatGPT or
Claude first. See what comes back. Odds are you'll have a working draft in
under three minutes rather than an hour. Time is your most valuable asset —
stop giving it away on tasks that machines can handle. |
4. Marketing and Thought Leadership
(Without the Migraines)
I've worked with law firms
across more than seventy countries, and one of the most common frustrations I
hear from partners is this: "We know we should be doing more marketing,
but we simply don't have the time." I understand. You're running a practice,
not a media company. Except that in 2025, the firms that are visible online are
the ones winning new clients — and the ones that aren't visible are slowly
becoming invisible.
AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude,
and Perplexity have made this genuinely manageable. A specialist employment
lawyer can use AI to identify the questions their ideal clients are asking
online — "What are my rights after wrongful termination?" for instance
— and turn those questions into helpful articles, LinkedIn posts, or short
explainer videos. The content positions the firm as a trusted authority, builds
credibility, and generates enquiries. All without spending three hours staring
at a blank screen wondering where to start.
Short videos explaining complex
legal issues in plain language are performing particularly well on LinkedIn and
YouTube right now. You don't need a production team. You need a phone, decent
lighting, and something useful to say. AI can help you work out what to say and
how to say it.
5. Productivity: Getting Back Hours
You Didn't Know You Were Losing
Perhaps the most underestimated
benefit of AI in legal practice is the sheer amount of time it gives back. Not
glamorous, perhaps — but transformative. Tools like Otter.ai automatically
transcribe meetings. Microsoft Copilot drafts emails, summarises documents, and
organises meeting notes. AI assistants can generate action lists from long
transcripts so that important decisions don't get buried in sixty pages of
notes.
Cumulatively, these tools can
save a lawyer hours every single week. Hours that can be spent on client
strategy, business development, professional development — or simply leaving
the office at a reasonable time. Which, if you've ever worked in a law firm,
you'll know is not always a given.
A Word on Responsibility
AI in legal practice isn't
without its considerations. Client confidentiality matters. Every AI tool you
use should be properly vetted for data security. AI-generated research should
always be verified by a qualified professional — these tools are brilliant, but
they're not infallible, and in law, an error is never just an error.
Think of AI as the most capable
assistant you've ever had — one that needs clear instructions, careful
supervision, and sensible boundaries. The lawyer remains responsible for the
advice. AI simply helps deliver it better.
The Bottom Line
AI is not coming for lawyers.
It's coming for the inefficiencies, the bottlenecks, the routine tasks, and the
wasted hours that stop talented legal professionals from doing their best work.
The firms that understand this —
and act on it — will be faster, more profitable, better at serving clients, and
frankly more enjoyable places to work. The firms that ignore it will find
themselves increasingly competing on price against practices that have already
built a significant structural advantage.
You didn't spend years studying
law to spend your career filling in forms and drafting first drafts of NDAs.
Neither did your team. AI won't replace you — but it can absolutely free you.
The only question worth
asking now is: are you going to use it — or wait to see what happens?
|
About
Frank Furness Frank Furness
is a keynote speaker, sales trainer, and AI consultant with 25+ years of
experience and clients in over 70 countries. He helps businesses understand
and implement AI practically — without the jargon, the panic, or the
unnecessary complexity. To find out more, visit frankfurness.com |
