Law Times

February 6, 2017

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Law Times • February 6, 2017 Page 9 www.lawtimesnews.com Change within firms driven by different factors Bridging gap between legal services and technology BY MARG. BRUINEMAN For Law Times L aw firms feeling the pres- sure to do things differ- ently are pushing at the boundaries of how law is practised, often driving new de- velopments inside and outside of the firm. Osler Hoskin & Harcourt LLP's chief knowledge officer Mara Nickerson says that in- cludes looking for opportunities on how the firm can do things differently to reduce the legal spend but also expose the firm's lawyers to innovations. "The business environment has changed, which means the environment for our clients has changed around how we prac- tise," says Nickerson. "It's really very driven by the industry and the market and the need to reduce the cost of pro- viding legal services." Osler has a practice manage- ment and innovation initiative that focuses on the way lawyers practise. And the firm has part- nered with the Legal Innovation Zone at Ryerson University to expose its lawyers to some of the developments that are underway in the legal industry and to get early access to some of the start- ups and their tools while raising the firm's profile on the innova- tion front. The firm has conducted hackathons with clients and partners using design thinking, there have been internal events to bring awareness to some of the innovation going on in the industry and it has introduced new technology as well. Nickerson says successful in- novation at her firm includes the access privacy group's online tools for clients and the competi- tion group's merger notification analysis. "We recognize that [in] this changing legal industry, in try- ing to introduce innovation and change the way we practice with our clients and internally, it is a change management initiative and we actually have a change management consultant," says Nickerson. "So we're trying to provide an environment internally where we're not just saying, 'Hey, you've got to change, figure it out by yourself,' but where they can come up with ideas and we are there to support them and help them. "In the end, any change is go- ing to be driven largely by our clients and by the imaginations of our lawyers, but the under- lying fundamental issue is the need to bring down the cost of how we provide legal services," says Nickerson. Key for many firms is bridging that gap be- tween legal and technology. That led to the development of a suite of services provided by Cassels Brock & Blackwell LLP's e-discovery and information governance team called Leading E-dge. It was designed to use the best available technology com- bined with the firm's expertise to achieve cost-efficient legal services. Marlon Hylton, the firm's head of discovery management, says Leading E-dge was devel- oped with an eye to creating value for clients through innova- tion. It also has an application to due diligence on the corporate side, he says. "We need to have the ex- pertise, the technology and the processes in place to handle any proceeding, any legal matter, that engages issues of informa- tion," says Hylton. The firm has an interdisci- plinary team of people who un- derstand the law as well as tech- nology, particularly information analytics, which they apply to the firm's legal needs. By bridg- ing technology and legal, the team focuses on issues involving electronic information and what clients need to do with that to be compliant with laws, legislation and rules. "What we're doing is a very proactive move given where things are going in the market," says Hylton. "We wish to be one of the leading firms living in the future in the present." Mark Tamminga leads in- novation initiatives for Gowl- ing WLG LLP and is convinced that the new lawyers will need to know more than just law. They need to be computer literate and know how to use technol- ogy to advance the legal profes- sion, he says. The firm recently brought engineer Rick Kathuria on board as national director of project management and legal logistics, says Tamminga. The firm has started to open up its project management sys- tems to clients in a way where clients can see how much has been spent on a matter and how much work has been done. Gowling also works closely with vendors to co-develop and test products, such as El- evate Services, which created the firm's project management soft- ware. The law firm served as co- developer and primary tester; in return, the product was tuned for Gowling's specific needs. Tamminga sees many more pos- sibilities for the future. Taking advantage of its pres- ence in its Waterloo, Ont. office, the firm has been working with software vendors and dealing with their coders to get access to tools early on and have them customized for the firm's needs. "It's going to be much more important to understand what data analytics are about, how artificial intelligence, cognitive computing, how that works. If you don't think computer sci- ence is important, you're wrong, it is important. And law firms need to step up to that level," says Tamminga. Globally, Dentons has stepped outside the firm by cre- ating Nextlaw Labs as an au- tonomous external company focusing on developing legal innovation initiatives, says its CEO, Dan Jansen. Nextlaw Labs has become involved in launch- ing companies such as QualMet, a quality metrics company that measures the effectiveness of lawyers. The goal for Nextlaw Labs is to drive innovation into Dentons and earn a return on investment. "This $600-billion global [legal] industry has been pretty slow to adopt technology and therein lies the opportunity," says Jansen, a non-lawyer who describes himself as a serial en- trepreneur. Jansen sees some areas in law that are ripe for in- novation, such as expert legal research, matter management, better transparency and qual- ity metrics/performance assess- ment. In its first one-and-a-half years, Nextlaw Labs has started or become involved in 12 com- panies, and it envisions doubling or tripling that in the next year or two. "I think Nextlaw Labs could be a pretty significant player in the legal industry," says Jansen. "Our business is reinventing law and I think we have a lot of growth ahead of us. If this was fintech, I'm 10 years too late. If this was alternative advertising models, I'm probably 20 years too late. Different industries evolve at different rates. . . . the legal profession, its business model hasn't changed signifi- cantly in many years. And it's about to." LT FOCUS Mara Nickerson says innovation at her firm is driven in part by 'the need to bring down the cost of how we provide legal services.' Right-sized Thinking® • 1-800-323-3781 • pallettvalo.com Your Authority For: Business Law • Commercial Litigation • Commercial Real Estate Construction • Insolvency & Corporate Restructuring Employment & Labour • Wills, Estates & Trusts One Size Does Not Fit All Some legal matters require bigger solutions than others. At Pallett Valo we provide pragmatic, forward-thinking legal counsel that fits each client's specific business challenge without compromising service or quality. Try on our Right-sized Thinking® and we'll help you hit the ground running. Untitled-1 1 2017-01-27 10:26 AM We need to have the expertise, the technology and the processes in place to handle any proceeding, any legal matter, that engages issues of information. Marlon Hylton

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