It’s live!!!! The new Basha Systems legal technology news site. Come for a visit. For TOO long, there was no source for news on developments in practice management and document assembly. And yet, several vendors has started getting savvy about social marketing. For example, Exari and ContractExpress have launched blogs and twitter feeds of news and development. And so, rather than hunting everywhere for developments, I created a page for myself to track these latest “feeds” and then set it up for you to enjoy. Come take a look; bookmark the site, and come back regularly. If there are OTHER feeds you want to see, please suggest it. Best of all, check out the new technology. This is the first consultant website that you can “PERSONALIZE”. Yeah, you can reorder the feeds, change the priorities, and move it around to suit YOUR technology needs.
The Place to Go for News on Document Assembly and Case Management
Website Redesign
Every other year I assess our firm’s web-presence and look at the state of technology. My goal is to build a website that is informative, describes the products we support, and gives useful comparative and illustrative information about those products. Two years ago my interests were wide ranging, but the core of our business was HotDocs, GhostFill and Time Matters. Since that time, our skill set and product offerings have expanded, as well as our staff. We now have significant programming and database management capabilities by virtue of the inclusion of Steve Stockstill and Marc Wexler in our virtual offerings, and have engaged our partner Holly Humphreys in several billing engagements.
We have entered into the web-development business with a new offering coming out in the 4th quarter through our partner businesswebsitedesigners.com.au that addresses the needs of lawyers interested in both social media and document automation. We have diversified our offerings of practice management solutions to include AdvologixPM and Amicus Attorney Premium Edition. We have built solutions with Exari document assembly and DealBuilder, now offered on a SaaS model as ContractExpress. And we have partnered with NetDocuments to provide cloud-based document management. And so, our website, as comprehensive as it is, is hopelessly out of date.
Documents in the Clouds
I spend a large amount of time and money each year worrying about “backing up” my data files. Years ago, I decided to centralize all my files on a File Server. A peer-to-peer network was good for distributing processing, but a disaster when you are like me, working on multiple PC’s. I do that so that I can test software on different environments. One I decided on a central file server (realize the decision was not rocket science), the issue came on appropriate backup routines. I tried tape cartridges, but most were too slow and too small. I currently am working with a RAID-V server array, removable hard-drive backup, combined with MozyPro. The system works, but is not ideal. The hard-drive backups are not swapped often enough; MozyPro took forever to get all my data, and afterwords, is quite slow on the restores. And so, I am now looking into a “cloud” solution, in particular NetDocuments.
Salesforce.com Apps for Lawyers
What if you could access your network from ANYWHERE and at ANYTIME? What if you could check your calendar, check your task list, do your billing and access all your documents? What if you could do this WITHOUT A NETWORK? What if you could do it WITHOUT a Server, without a terminal server, and without any network infrastructure at all? What if the entire network was IN THE CLOUDS. Wouldn’t that be great (for you that is)? What if this cloud-based system was infinitely customizable, and infinitely expandable? What if you could purchase “plugins” and other packages to extend the functionality of the database? What if there was a network of consultants who could assist you? What if there were hooks into Web-based document assembly applications like EXARI? What if I told you this system was already built and opened for business last month. Take a look at AdvologixPM.
Going Paperless - The Legal Stuff
Have you ever considered going truly “PAPERLESS”? If you do, did you plan on telling your clients? And what do you do with all their STUFF? The answer may lie in your client engagement letter. So long as you disclose to your client what you are going to do with the documents in his/her case, and so long as you keep originals of those documents you are legally and ethically required to keep, you should be in a position to go paperless without increasing your risk of malpractice. Wells Anderson and I have developed some model language that you can you in your engagement letter. We give it with the caveat that while we are lawyers, we are likely not admitted to practice in your jurisdiction, and second we are not offering this language as legal advice. We are asking you to consider this language and review it in light of your firm’s document retention procedures and your state’s legal and ethical requirements regarding document retention.
Easy Case Management & Technolawyer
A recent series of posts on Technolawyer, titled “Legal Software and Consultants” troubled me. In this series, Mark Deal, Ay Uaxe, and Jason Havens spared on the role of legal consultants in implementing case management solutions. There was a touch of resentment on both sides. On one side, the lawyers (of whom I count myself), look to their extensive education, their extensive domain knowledge and work experience as qualifiers in the world of software design and process. It should be “easy”; it should be “cheap”; and anyone can do this stuff; it’s not rocket science. Why don’t those vendors understand? Why don’t they anticipate and design for my needs. On the other side are the legal technology consultants who have spent years studying the software tools, designing solutions with the software, and implementing and training. Many serve in defacto advisory capacity to software vendors, fielding feature requests and reporting on bugs.
Cloud Based Practice Management
In the next few weeks, my reviews of CLIO and RocketMatter will appear in Technolawyer, with copies on this site. I don’t want to give away the results, but I want to comment more generally on the development goals of cloud-based offerings versus client-server offerings. To some degree, I have dealt with that tension in my development and advisory role in the creation of Wealth Transfer Planning and its unique front-end for HotDocs. It is this balancing act between simplicity and sophistication, between stability and customizability, that marks really good software. CLIO and RocketMatter are following in the footsteps of the two giants of software development.
The Return of Bob Butler - BestThinking.com
There is not much to write at the present time, but rather, a heads-up of something coming down the pike. Bob Butler, former CEO of DataTXT (aka Time Matters Software) has gone public with a new venture called BestThinking.com. The website has been in development for a while and has just been launched. It promises a blending of the best social networking in Linked-In and Facebook, along with the social ranking in Diggs, and the collaboratively edited content of Wikipedia.
Related Link:
KRONOS - Evaluation Criteria for Software and RocketMatter
I recently engaged in a long conversation with Larry Port of Rocket Matter about the state of software design, and the common disconnect between programmers, marketeers and end users. It turns out Larry was a specialist in “usability studies” - the new buzz word in software design. He pointed me to TED. At that time I recalled a series of ABA Techshow and other presentations I made back in 2001 on how legal software should be evaluated. I reproduce my unedited article from 2001 below, with the caveat it is not Web 2.0 aware .... But will in the future revisit some of theses ideas, particularly in a forthcoming review in Technolawyer of RocketMatter.
Deciding on a Practice Management System: The Three Lists Method
By this point, most law firms and businesses have automated to some degree. Few offices still depend on the typewriter and the paper calendar. Word Processors, MS Outlook and some form of billing program can be found in most, if not all, offices.
Lawyers, paralegals and businesses are ready to move to the next level. The most important thing to determine, of course, is which is the most efficient and cost effective move to make.
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