Your associates are already using AI for research and drafting. Judges are requiring disclosure. State bars are issuing guidance. If your firm doesn't have an AI policy, you have an ethics exposure.
Book a CallYou need AI that accelerates your practice without creating malpractice exposure or breaching privilege. That's exactly where we work.
Accelerate contract review, automate due diligence, enhance legal research, streamline e-discovery. We identify the AI use cases that reduce associate hours on low-value work — and build a roadmap to deploy them safely.
ABA Model Rule 1.1 requires competence in technology. State bars are issuing AI guidance. Client data in AI tools raises privilege and confidentiality questions. We assess your exposure and build governance frameworks that satisfy ethical obligations.
We scan your AI footprint, confidentiality exposure, and ethics compliance gaps — focused on ABA guidance, state bar rules, and client data handling. Delivered as a concise brief.
Stakeholder interviews across practice groups, AI tool inventory, privilege and confidentiality risk assessment, and a comprehensive gap analysis against bar ethics obligations.
Use-case scoring for contract review, due diligence, legal research, and e-discovery automation. Phased roadmap with ethics and confidentiality safeguards built in.
Fractional AI leadership with ongoing monitoring of ABA guidance, state bar opinions, and judicial rulings on AI in legal practice. We track developments so you can advise clients confidently.
Courts and state bars are moving fast on AI guidance. Every month without a governance framework is a month of unquantified ethics risk.
Lawyers must understand AI tools they use, ensure competent supervision of AI outputs, and maintain confidentiality when using AI services. Competence now includes technological competence with AI.
California, Florida, New York, Texas, and over 30 other state bars have issued AI guidance. Requirements vary — from mandatory disclosure to outright restrictions on AI-generated filings.
Federal judges across multiple districts now require attorneys to certify whether AI was used in preparing filings. Sanctions for undisclosed AI use have already been imposed.
Entering client data into AI tools may waive privilege or breach confidentiality obligations. Firms need clear policies on which tools are approved and how data flows through them.
Start with a free AI Readiness Audit built for legal practice. No obligation, no sales pitch — just a clear picture of where your firm stands.
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