Everyone says they want to “leverage AI.” But without a plan, that’s how you end up with four unpaid ChatGPT tabs open and a broken disclosure process.
Legal AI can save time, clean up documentation, and help your legal team move faster. But only if you implement it with intention.
Here’s a no-BS guide to doing it right.
Different versions of legal AI platforms serve different purposes. Don’t get distracted by bells and whistles you don’t need. Focus on the specific problem your team actually struggles with. Solve one high-friction task and avoid overhauling everything at once. Once you’ve addressed that, you can expand into adjacent use cases with clearer internal buy-in.
Start with your time sinks:
These are your pain points. Fix those, not the whole department.
If your AI strategy starts with “first, we change everything,” you’ve already lost.
Not all AI is fit for legal purposes. Generic LLMs are fine for drafting emails or summarizing. Not for structuring invention disclosures.
You need:
Otherwise, you risk inaccurate outputs and unprotected IP. Legal workflows demand reliability, not generic text generation.
Using AI shouldn’t mean giving up control, it should mean taking full ownership of what goes in and what comes out.
Before feeding sensitive data and client information into a legal AI system, verify that the platform does not have any rights of ownership. More importantly, you should also retain rights over anything the system produces. That includes disclosures, drafts, and structured summaries. If your platform isn’t explicit about data ownership, walk away.
Engineers and inventors still need to check the AI’s interpretation. Legal still decides what counts as a novel. You’re responsible for what gets filed, shared, or stored, no matter how good the draft looks.
Someone has to oversee the implementation. They need to be educated about the platform, believe in the investment, and be willing to get others on board.
That person should:
Whether it’s a legal ops lead, a senior IP counsel, or someone in product, make sure someone’s driving. Don’t treat this like a self-driving car, especially if your team is new to AI platforms. Not everyone on the team will know how to extract efficient output. They need someone who is willing to teach them and answer any questions along the way.
You won’t get buy-in from GCs, IP specialists, or IT teams with hype. Show the AI’s real results.
Examples:
Get one early win. Then tell that story.
Build momentum with the team. It can be difficult to implement new technology, but finding tangible results helps show the benefits (or downside if you chose the wrong platform!).
Pick one broken process. Use AI to fix it. Measure the improvement. Then expand. That’s it.
Legal AI doesn’t have to be scary, or sketchy. Just strategic.