Practice Model Canvas - create a new legal service (or improve upon an existing one) with this canvas
So get
the practice model canvas and it will help you think through what your firm might need to look like going forward and you might want to listen to the podcast with Alex Devendra if you haven't done that and actually understanding the shape of the legal market right now will be easier after this brief sponsored segment with Jack Newton from Clio and then we'll hear from professor Burton.
You print out
the practice model canvas, and you spend weeks thinking about how can we maximize the value of our employee handbooks and minimize the time it takes us to put into it, but we make them better and faster and easier to deliver, and you bring this back in to your boss or your partner or the managing attorney or whatever, you say, «I've figured it out.
So get
the practice model canvas and it will help you think through what your firm might need to look like going forward and you might want to listen to the podcast with Alex Devendra if you haven't done that and actually understanding the shape of the legal market right now will be easier after this brief sponsored segment with Jack Newton from Clio and then we'll hear from Professor Barton.
If people are more interested, like I said, we'll include
the practice model canvas in the show notes for today.
The Practice Model Canvas is a visual planning tool for thinking through the core elements of a legal product or service.
If you pull that down, you'll go to the insider library and that's where you'll find the start here
practice model canvas which comes from another podcast with Alex Devendra.
Lawyerist.com/library and you can get
the practice model canvas and any other freebies you want.
Alix, we are going to be including in the show notes a link to download
the practice model canvas, which is a tool that you've developed with your partners at Start Here HQ to help lawyers apply design thinking in their own practices.
Online platforms to create custom design tools, including journey maps, personas, service blueprints,
practice model canvases, and more:
Not exact matches
The painter Lubaina Himid is here with
canvases that present imaginary architecture by imaginary black women; part of a project from 1997 - 78 called Architects,
Models, Plans they extend her
practice of proposing moments when black women could alter history.