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Written by Norman Clark and Lisa M. Walker Johnson
Published: 19 July 2017
By Grombo - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=888253

The future is here, but many of us don’t know it.

Technology has been a fundamental component of the practice of law for a quarter-century; but most law firms have failed to understand how it is fundamentally changing – indeed, already has fundamentally changed – the practice of law. 

No one can deny that the business of practicing law will probably be much more difficult ten years from now than it is even today; and that the seismic changes that technology has introduced into the business world will contribute to that challenge: operationally, ethically, financially, and strategically. Law firms will have to continue to evolve. Not all will be able to do so.

The ever-faster pace of change has blurred the perceptions of law firm owners, leaders, and managers, much like trying to study a high-speed train passing close by at 300 k.p.h.

As we and our Walker Clark colleagues have helped law firms "look over their strategic horizons" and identify the changes that they will have to make, we have validated several important points that typical "law firm of the future" discussions usually overlook: 

Click here to read and download our latest paper New Paradigms and Old Lessons for Cyberlawyers.

 

Norman Clark and Lisa M. Walker Johnson

 

 

Walker Clark offers a full range of planning tools and methods to help law firms discover, understand, and build their best futures. Click here for more information.