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| ===[[Legaltech]] as a rent-extraction machine=== | | ===[[Legaltech]] as a rent-extraction machine=== |
| We talk about this elsewhere, but herein is the fundamental ''problem'' with [[legaltech]]. [[Legaltech]] addresses inefficiencies which manifest themselves as negative annuities: ongoing costs and resource drains for quotidian tasks with minimal value. It is, therefore, predicated on the [[vendor]] earning not just a profit, ''but an annuity''. The thought process is this: if customers have an ongoing cost of ''ten'', they will be prepared to pay me an ongoing cost of ''two'' to remove it. Mathematically, unimpeachable logic. | | We talk about this elsewhere, but herein is the fundamental ''problem'' with [[legaltech]]. {{legaltech as rent-seeking}} |
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| But there is a paradox here: If your [[legaltech]] solution costs you something like two: that is, it continues to require costs and resources such that two represents a fair margin on work you continue to do, then ''this is not legaltech but something else.'' It may well be deft process-reengineering coupled with [[outsourcing]]<ref>[[Outsourcing]] has its own hidden costs and shortcomings, of course.</ref> — but that is ''not'' [[legaltech]]. That is [[Management consultant|''management consultancy'']].
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| If your solution really is legaltech: if the work needed to remove your ongoing cost of ten is achieved upon implementation done then, once I have paid for its implementation, why should I pay an ongoing marginal cost per unit?
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| My problem is solved. There is no longer an ongoing cost of ten. The machine costs nothing to operate. My question is now: what on earth am I paying this ongoing running cost ''for''? {{sa}}
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| *[[ClauseHub: theory]] | | *[[ClauseHub: theory]] |
| *[[Reg tech]] | | *[[Reg tech]] |