Showing posts with label Richard Susskind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Susskind. Show all posts

Monday, 18 November 2013

Northern Ireland Bar Conference 2013

Richard Susskind with Brian Spencer at Titanic Belfast.
The Northern Ireland Bar Council conference 'Transforming Legal Practice Through Innovation' (preview here) was headlined by the eminent legal futurist Richard Susskind (@RichardSusskind). Ahead of his keynote address, a number of other esteemed speakers addressed the conference. Here they are in order:

Attorney-General John Larkin began by his address by admitting that he had not been at the forefront of transforming practice. He noted two errors that he and others have made:
One: That technology doesn't matter and we can get along with it. 
Two: Some have idolised technology and technological innovation for its own sake. 
John Larkin elaborated. On the first error made, he said: Those who ignore tech advance will soon realise the error of their ways in the exhaust fumes of their competitors. On the said error made, he said: The second is a subtler risk. Technological advancements for lawyers cannot be an end in itself. It can only be better so long as we can use it to better serve our clients. There is little value in wielding a technological masterpiece if we cannot be sure of its reliability. 

He said finally that: "We lawyers should also be solvers of problems. Seek better solutions. I commend this conference heartily as it takes its first step in that direction."

QUB alumnus and Supreme Court Judge Lord Kerr took to the podium. Lord Kerr began by confession. Until recently he said, "I couldn't think without a pen in my hand, I was a complete Luddite." But Lord Kerr is now a convert and advocate of technology as tool for enhancing justice and the work of legal practitioners.

Tuesday, 13 August 2013

The Lawyer's Email Hysteria of the 1990s


In an interview with litigator-turned-presenter James D. Zirin, Richard Susskind spoke of how his mid-1990s suggestions that lawyers would use email were rubbished and silenced by the settled legal establishment. Backing-up the discussion a bit, Richard Susskind explained the context in this way:
“I look at the tax profession. I look at the way they handle tax risk, the way they identify, control, manage, hedge, monitor tax risk: they use sophisticated tools and techniques to help clients, not simply resolve their problems, but say, on the horizon are 4 problems you’re likely to face and here’s how you can manage and control these risks." 
 James D. Zirin then breached the email-hysteria topic. He asked Susskind:
"You’ve been working in this area for about 30 years. When you got started there was considerable resistance at the English Bar to your ideas, isn’t that true – that the Law Society (what we in the US call the American Bar Association) didn’t want you to speak in public?”

Friday, 9 August 2013

Richard Susskind discusses Twitter and Facebook, Ctd



Richard Susskind, legal technology specialist, continues with his discussion of social media:
"If my clients are sending out regular messages of about what they're doing, where they're going and what they're doing, I would want to be part of that; even if the mechanism of communication is a daft name."

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Richard Susskind discusses Twitter and Facebook




At 23 minutes of the video above and here, legal technology specialist Richard Susskind discusses the usefulness and merit of social media as it relates to law practice. Susskind then said at the end of the discussion that in 5 years time, social media will become mainstream and ubiquitous.
"In 5 years time we'll have embraced [social media]... I'll just take you back to 1995 when people were sceptical about email..."
He also made an interesting point about how junior lawyers use social media:
"To be fair most junior lawyers don't use [social media] for business purposes..."
  



Tuesday, 21 May 2013

The Big Four Challenges Facing the Legal Profession: Overheads, Market Liberalisation, Technology and Client Demands



The author of Tomorrow's Lawyer Richard Susskind (@richardsusskind) recently appeared on an episode of Bloomberg Law with Lee Pacchia (@leepacchia). Lee Pacchia asked: "What is the current state of the legal profession?"
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