Lawyer Monthly - March 2022

31 MAR 2022 | WWW.LAWYER-MONTHLY.COM HOW ‘NO-CODE’ CAN DIGITALLY TRANSFORM THE LEGAL SECTOR around data security, transparency, compliance, and client confidentiality can make large-scale change risky. Many firms also depend on multiple legacy systems, which are more difficult to integrate with newer technologies. This spread of technologies create data siloes, which make it difficult to gain a single view of a client. Historically, firms have also been weighed down by admin-heavy processes, resulting in longer case times and missed opportunities to serve more clients. Up until now, overcoming these challenges would require specific developer expertise and substantial IT budgets. Ultimately, switching to new ways of working requires a willingness to experiment – which, for an industry with zero tolerance for failure, would be a major cultural shift. Still, even the most reluctant firms have had little choice but to reimagine business processes in recent years. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated most companies’ digital transformation plans, as firms suddenly faced work-from-home mandates and conducting client meetings and hearings online. Technology became key to survival, platform can help the legal sector build complex digital solutions significantly faster and at a fraction of the cost of traditional software development. Using no-code, the development of business-transforming integrations, applications and automations is rapid. Developers, business architects, and 'citizen developers' work with easyto-use building blocks to quickly assemble solutions without writing code, which helps reduce pressure on developers. Certain platforms also give high coders the ability to build reusable integrations and to extend the core no-code capabilities. Critically, the combination of no-code apps and automation also helps legal firms overcome their integration challenges, as they can be weaved into the business. Applications can be seamlessly integrated with automation projects to transform processes and eliminate labour-intensive tasks. This time can be re-invested into the and according to the Wolters Kluwer survey, those who had already adopted modern technology solutions were best prepared to support clients remotely at the start of the pandemic. Now that they have had to take the first steps along the road to digital transformation, legal firms are primed to look at how technology can not only support business continuity, but enable them to capitalise on this opportunity to drive business growth, increase efficiency and open new revenue and client service opportunities. Building applications with no-code Fortunately, technologies are available that can help firms innovate quickly at reduced risk. A no-code enterprise development With a no-code enterprise development platform, firms can easily integrate systems and create a consolidated view of case information that is more accessible to key stakeholders.

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