Remove 2012 Remove Law firm Remove Law Office
article thumbnail

4 Hispanic Lawyers Who Are Leading Historic Change in Law

Legal Talk Network

After working as an accountant, getting married, and having two daughters, Chief Justice Contreras received her Doctor of Jurisprudence degree from theUniversity of Houston Law Center in 1990. She went on to manage a law office in San Antonio, make partner at a civil trial firm, and then open her own mediation practice.

article thumbnail

Providing Exceptional Customer Service

Legal Tech Monitor

Years ago, I put together a presentation called “The Client-Centered Law Practice.” It focused on the irony that while law firms focused on serving clients and appropriately addressing their legal needs, clients sometimes had an impression that differed from that. By 1992, it was 51% businesses and 40% individuals.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Next-Gen Bar Exam Must Tackle Google Schools and the Digital Native Myth by Testing Basic Tech Skills for Practice

3 Geeks and a Law Blog

Casey Flaherty has been talking about minimum tech expectations in the practice of law since 2012. The 2019 American Bar Association Tech Report confirms Lawson’s hypothesis: only 28 percent of solos report the availability of technology training, while more than 95 percent of attorneys at large firms reported access to training.

article thumbnail

LegalTech Trends: 2023 Recap and 2024 Forecast

Legal Tech Monitor

As Baby Boomers retire, technology adoption in law firms will increase across the board. E-filing will continue to gain traction and the number of law offices with paperless workflows in place will increase as well. She also co-authors “Criminal Law in New York,” a Thomson Reuters treatise.

article thumbnail

Next-Gen Bar Exam Must Tackle Google Schools and the Digital Native Myth by Testing Basic Tech Skills for Practice

Legal Tech Monitor

Casey Flaherty has been talking about minimum tech expectations in the practice of law since 2012. The 2019 American Bar Association Tech Report confirms Lawson’s hypothesis: only 28 percent of solos report the availability of technology training, while more than 95 percent of attorneys at large firms reported access to training.