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For ALSPs, Is It Better to Go Big or Go Niche?
While clients may increasingly want ALSPs to expand their range of services and offerings, the end result could find legal departments grappling with an overstuffed and redundant list of homogenized outside service providers.Reducing Vendor Count May Not Eliminate Cyber Risk, but Will Companies Try Anyway?
Not every business may be willing to sacrifice its bottom line to gain a little ground on cybersecurity, especially if any potential cyber benefits are far from assured.In Tight E-discovery Job Market, ALSPs Have an Edge
ALSPs may have in-house and outside counsel beat when it comes to both e-discovery salaries and the opportunity for career advancement.Amid High Demand, Some Organizations Are Still 'Lowballing' E-Discovery Hires
It's a good time to be a job candidate in the e-discovery market, but not all law firms or legal departments may be ready or willing to fork over the large salaries that many are expecting.In-House Can Handle Government-Mandated Cyber Reporting—But Will It Work?
Lawmakers are pondering legislation that would require companies to report cyberattacks to the government. While many legal departments may be able to handle the strain that comes with additional reporting requirements, how effective such a law would be remains to be seen.View more book results for the query "Expedia Group"
Law Firms or ALSPs? Legal Departments Aren't Factoring Money Into Their Answer
Legal Decoder's "ALSPs and Business of Law" webinar examined the volume-centric decision matrix that often determines whether legal departments insource or outsource work as well as how and when law firms and ALSPs fit into the picture.In-House Likes a CISO, but Not More Than Good Law Firm Cybersecurity
Putting a CISO on staff may help law firms send a message to clients that they take cybersecurity seriously, but it's also not a surefire way to lose—or win—business from clients.Legal Departments May Want Recent Grads—But Do Recent Grads Want Them?
Corporate legal departments that have traditionally targeted more experienced attorneys for job offers may now be more willing to hire recent law school graduates. However, those circumstances may quickly reverse themselves as businesses continue to recover from the pandemic.Legal Vendors Boast Lawyer-Built Tech, but In-House Departments Want to See Receipts
Legal departments gravitate towards legal technology companies with lawyers on board to help guide and shape the direction of products. But those lawyers' input needs to be substantive and quality, in-house tech purchasers told Law.com.Vendors Boast Lawyer-Built Tech, but In-House Wants to See Receipts
Legal departments gravitate towards legal technology companies that have lawyers onboard to help guide and shape the direction of products. However, in-house teams remain wary of providers who use the presence of lawyers as more of a marketing tool rather than a way to enhance services.Trending Stories
Law Offices of Gary Martin Hays & Associates, P.C.
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