Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Who Are Alternative Legal Service Providers Today?

Alternative legal services providers

Following  word from Bob Ambrogi this morning that Axiom, a global legal services company providing legal professionals and technology to legal departments in the largest companies in the world, was going public, I started wondering who are the “alternative” legal service providers. Are traditional law firms an alternative?

Axiom already has 2,000 employees across three continents.  

A few weeks ago I read from Legaltech News’ Frank Ready that Elevate, providing consulting, technology and services to major corporations and law firms, worldwide, is considering purchasing a UK law firm and going public, following the recent acquisition of two companies.

From Elevate’s flounder and executive chair, Liam Brown:

We’d rather bring in public company capital so that the management team can continue to control the strategy and direction and growth of the business.

When companies such as Axiom and Elevate were started, they were viewed as alternatives to the way legal services had been provided by traditional law firms. They were labeled and are still called a “Alternative Legal Service Provider (ALSP).” 

There are hundreds, if not thousands, of ALSP’s today. They include LegalZoom down to smaller companies with Apps delivering legal services to consumers and small business people. Services that law firms could either not provide or not provide in the manner consumers expected services in an Amazon next day delivery world.

Thomson Reuters reported last month that ALSPs comprise $10.7 billion of the market for legal services, a compounded annual growth rate of almost 13% percent compared to just two years ago. The ALSP market is projected to grow by 25% over the next few years. Significantly greater growth than the traditional legal services market. 

Rather than label ALSP’s an alternative, why not call a law firm an alternative also. 

On one side you have this more expensive, inefficient, tech deficient model built on paying its employees $400,000 a year (versus a $100,000 or less at at an ALSP) so that a good number of its employees can make a million dollars or more a year.

On the other side we have companies driven by delivering services as efficiently and cost effectively as possible by leveraging innovation and technology in a fashion not hamstrung by the way its been done. 

Law firms may even be called an alternative method to procuring legal services a decade from now.

I am being a bit cynical. There are many fine law firms offering valued services. My guess though is that the venture capital and public capital markets view what’s been labeled an alternative model as one that corporations, worldwide, will use a lot of for legal services.

It was Justin Kan, who has raised over $65 million from the likes of Andreessen Horowitz, for his legal services company, Artium, who said something to the effect, that when he found an industry model based on being inefficient, he wanted in. 

Ambrogi asked Cisco Chief Legal Officer, Mark Chandler, about ALSP’s in a recent edition of Ambrogi’s LawNext podcast. Ambrogi, paraphrasing a bit, relayed to me on Facebook, that Chandler  “doesn’t like the word “alternative.” He is open to any legal services provider who will offer him good quality and good value for the money.”

It is not my intent to bash law firms, there are just multiple alternatives to the procurement of legal services today – alternatives that will grow in number in the years ahead. 



Who Are Alternative Legal Service Providers Today? posted first on https://fergusonlawatty.wordpress.com

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