Not exact matches
Our
legal professionals work with clients in sectors as diverse as software and
services,
online, content, equipment and telecommunications, building extensive knowledge and insight into the
legal and commercial challenges they
face.
The real issue being
faced by the major
legal publishers is the loss of the expectation of ever increasing revenue and profit from their
online services that they had come to expect as a matter of right.
Our own events such as the
Online Legal Services Conference, historically, have served to sustain the few, true believers in the
face of disapproving partners and colleagues, for another year.
With the plethora of reports and blog posts of late whizzing around cyberland in relation to
online legal document and
service providers,
legal innovation, the law firm business model and the future of the
legal profession I reckon we're transitioning toward «two
faces of the law».
Aside from possible client and partner losses, incumbent Canadian firms will also be
faced with new management pressures: as the
Legal Post «s Mitch Kowalksi points out, Norton Rose brings unprecedented financial transparency (the firm makes its annual report public) as well as superior knowledge management and
online services to Canada.