Legal process outsourcer

Revision as of 11:54, 8 February 2024 by Amwelladmin (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
People Anatomy™
A spotter’s guide to the men and women of finance.
Index: Click to expand:
Tell me more
Sign up for our newsletter — or just get in touch: for ½ a weekly 🍺 you get to consult JC. Ask about it here.

Looks traveled. Hey—it’s lunchtime—let’s cook by electric chair.

They scrounged. They ad-libbed. Flash scrounged hot dogs. Laurent scrounged corned beef.

They packed them in. They stuffed the hoods. They pulled the switches. Sparks popped. The meat fried. The hoods dripped fat.

The meat cooked uneven. The concept rocked. The reality stunk.

—James Ellroy, The Cold Six Thousand

A firm that collects the windfalls and low—hanging fruit of contract negotiation by engaging cheap, paralegal staff, often in remote jurisdictions, to crunch through low-value legal processes no one else can be bothered to do doing properly.

According to soothsayers, seers and other miscellaneous blindfolded dartsmen of the legal industry, LPOs are a major disrupting force that will fundamentally re-engineer the industry. Or may have quietly already done so without anyone else noticing.

They may now, or may not, be at great risk from LLMs. But aren’t we all?

The LPO business model is easy to articulate in a four-box diagram, but hard to execute in practice. Hence there are very few of them out there, and they haven’t really made inroads on mainstream legal practice.

See also