Now, more than  ever, your focus is on your clients. Your priority is to continue to be their  familiar and trusted resource during an entirely unfamiliar time. While that  focus isn’t new — client service has always been important — the legal  technology required to seamlessly serve them has changed.
 
  As you confront changes related to new urgent  client inquiries, shifting priorities, and working from home, you may ask  yourself: How do I best serve my clients through all of this? Your workspace is  different. Your human resources are limited. It may seem daunting or simply  unrealistic to help them in the same way you could before.
 
Fortunately, there are resources that  can help you be the lawyer your clients need you to be. Yes, there are going to  be more challenges ahead and your ability to be agile is going to be key, but  it's possible with the right technology. Let’s look at some of the new issues  you are facing and discuss the legal tools that can help.
 
You need to be the trusted legal advisor … for  everything 
 
Like many lawyers, you provide legal guidance in  a variety of areas. But there are some practice areas you’re more familiar with  than others. Previously, your clients may have come to you with wills to draft,  divorces to negotiate, and real estate agreements to finalize. Now, some of  those same loyal clients may unfortunately be coming to you regarding  bankruptcy or foreclosure questions and concerns.
 
Today, some of your clients’ new concerns may  not be in your usual wheelhouse. While you never want to turn clients away,  keeping clients is especially crucial now. To meet clients’ changing needs, you  need to expand your practice, your knowledge, and your resources.
 
Collaborating looks a lot different 
 
Not so long ago, when one of your regular  clients brought you work that was outside of your expertise, you could walk  down the hall and ask a colleague about it. They may be more familiar with the  matter. They may know the right person to ask. They may know just the right way  to do research and get the best results.
 
Now, that’s not an option. Those quick and easy,  in-person conversations with colleagues have turned into scheduling a time to  chat over the phone or video. It’s certainly possible, but the convenience has  diminished. While you are still part of a firm, you are also learning how to  manage as a semi-solo lawyer. And now it’s vital to have everything you need  literally at your fingertips.
 
A lawyer’s digital skill set is now a must-have 
 
Clients have always depended on your depth and  breadth of knowledge, your resourcefulness, and your insight. Now clients need  to know that you can do everything you did in an office from your residence.  The expectation of running a fully functional law firm from your home office  may very well be the new long-term way of working.
 
With those new requirements comes the need for  digital agility. Your ability to use research tools to do things you previously  relied on others to do for or with you — whether that be crafting an in-depth litigation strategy or  simply picking a colleague’s brain over coffee — are now things you need to be  able to do “on your own” with the help of technology.
 
Find the right legal technology 
 
In the last few months, your life and way of  practicing law has dramatically changed. Your clients’ expectations, however,  haven’t. They need you now more than ever. As their circumstances continue to  evolve, what they need and demand from you will shift. The only way to provide  the same great client service they have come to expect is to lean on legal  research technology.
 
Tools like Practical Law, for  instance, give you access to the knowledge of hundreds of other lawyers whose  job is solely to keep you updated on the ever-changing legal landscape. When  you need to venture outside of your usual practice areas, Practical Law  provides access to up-to-date information, easy checklists, and other content  to give you the confidence to take on any case that comes your way. It’s like  having all of the knowledge you formerly gleaned from your colleagues available  instantly.
 
With their help, you can answer questions like:  How do I take on an unfamiliar matter or how do I keep up when things are changing so quickly? Armed  with the knowledge and confidence of those answers, you’ll ultimately have the  solution to your most important question: How do I keep my clients happy?
 
To see how our legal technology can help your firm, contact us for a free consultation.