Article from Legal Practice Intelligence discussing Google Apps and how it might benefit law firms.
Authored by Tony Brooks of Feynbrook, a company offering cloud and data services to law firms.
Good Stuff Happens in 1:1 Meetings: Why you need them and how to do them well
Cloud at the tipping point - Google Apps for Law Firms
1. Cloud at a tipping point
Microsoft has at last put its shoulder behind the cloud computing movement with the recent beta
release of Office365. It joins the heavyweight Google in this fast growing market. Cloud
computing is here to stay. In this article we put forward three compelling reasons why law firms
should be taking the cloud seriously: saving money, improving collaboration and the emergence
of cloud enterprise applications specific to the legal market.
Despite these compelling reasons, law firms are still nervous about going cloud. Concerns
about compliance, security and integration are barriers to adoption. However, providers such as
Google are actively targeting these issues and the barriers are slowly coming down, pointing to
a pending IT revolution, poised at the tipping point.
Reason #1: save money while improving email
Email is without doubt an essential business tool, encompassing email messaging, calendaring
and personal contact management. Providing a fast, accessible, safe and user friendly email
service is arguably the most important task of any law firm’s IT department. This is not as easily
done as it might seem; lots of time, money and sleep is lost by CIO’s delivering a seamless
email experience to their users. Let’s look at two very different approaches to providing this
service, through two fictional case studies - TradFirm and Cloudy & Partners.
TradFirm’s sprawling email ecosystem
TradFirm established itself in the early 00s and now has 30 partners and 60 support staff,
across two cities. TradFirm is typical of many law firms when it comes to email, using on-site
servers which it keeps in a data room at their head office. Over the years, TradFirm’s IT team
has diligently added new services and infrastructure to support them, with full funding from the
partnership.
● The email server machines are replaced every three years; they need to be, with the
increasing amount of data and traffic they need to manage. In addition to hardware
upgrades, the server software is upgraded too, itself a significant project.
● Each computer has Outlook installed, which employees use for managing email. They’re
using Outlook 2003 and are planning to upgrade to 2010 but have not managed to do this
yet.
● For remote access, IT provides Web Access (hosted on another server) and access via
VPN; but users must use the company laptop - other PCs are not supported.
● The amount of data they manage for email is best kept on a Storage Area Network. This
is a large storage device which provides the best level of performance and redundancy.
They are expensive and require specialist skills to maintain.
● As 90% of email traffic is junk, they subscribe to a spam filter service which removes
suspect email. This is an annual subscription, paid on a per user basis.
● Senior lawyers have started to use their own smartphones and iPads, demanding the
3. eventually chose to Go Google.
Google provides an email service via ‘the cloud’ as part of the Google Apps suite. For a fixed
fee per user per year ($50 USD), Cloudy & Partner’s corporate emails are stored on Google’s
servers and accessed over the Internet (or via Outlook).
● They were able to import data the partners brought with them - a collection of Outlook
PSTs, Lotus Notes email files, contact lists and documents.
● The IT team does not need to manage any email infrastructure - no backups, no spam
filters, no clustering, no storage and no mobile servers - all of these email ‘add-ons’ are
included.
● Users can access their corporate data using an internet browser (such as Internet
Explorer, Chrome and Firefox) from the office, at home, or on secondment at a client. No
VPN is required, just a connection online.
● The firm can enable a “bring your own technology” policy - any mobile device, PC or
Mac, are all supported
Reason #2: new, better ways to collaborate
Attachments = copies, extra work and wasted time
Lindsey works in Business Development at TradFirm and has been tasked with creating a
proposal for a valued client. She puts together the first draft and sends it to the two partners
who manage the client relationship, as well as two support staff. They get the document as an
attachment and are asked to provide comment. Three of the four make edits and send it back.
Lindsey has to combine the three edits in Word - not an easy task. On sending the revised
version 2 of the proposal, the partner who failed to reply to the first email has questions about the
differences between the two versions and Lindsey feels frustrated at having to firstly combine
the edits and now having to check many versions to find out which revision happened when and
by whom.
Work on the document together, not your own copy of it
Meanwhile, over at Cloudy & Partners, they need to quickly create job descriptions for a bunch
of paralegals they are urgently recruiting to work on a large litigation case. The matter partner’s
PA, Alison, creates a draft job description using Google Docs. When she has finished, she
shares it with the partner.
After editing, the partner shares the document further - opening it to the billing solicitor and the
head of litigation support. Each of these make edits, even at the same time (see the
screenshot).
4. Markers show where other people are editing the document, in real time.
While everyone is editing this, Alison is briefing Jeff, the recruiter at the external recruitment
company. As soon as the document is finished, Alison can share the job description with him
even though he is not Cloudy & Partners employee. Jeff is also able to view the complete
document history to see who changed what and when, giving him an idea of the evolution of the
key skills he should be looking for when interviewing candidates.
Alison also sets up a Google spreadsheet, sharing with Jeff and the group. This is where they’ll
keep track of applicants and their relative statuses. They use one spreadsheet, centrally stored
in the cloud, securely shared inside and outside of Cloudy & Partners and which everyone can
update as the recruitment process happens.
Even more collaboration apps included with the cloud
The IT department at Cloudy & Partners has a suite of applications which they can call upon to
tackle problems that their lawyers bring to them:
● “We need to communicate better when working from home and with colleagues
interstate” - instant messaging, voice and video chat, through Google Talk
● “The client wants a central store of matter information where we can upload documents,
share a calendar and create task lists” - create a website easily using Google Sites
● “Where can I store these CLE training videos?” - try Google Video for Business
● “We’re thinking of opening an office in Singapore. What will the cost be to provide email
and how quick can you set it up?” - the cost of computers plus $50 USD per user, per
year; if we really tried, this can be set up in one day.
For TradFirm to tackle the same issues, they will undoubtedly need to buy more hardware
and/or software, embark on a full IT project, or outsource just that particular slice of functionality
to a third party; certainly costing more than $50 USD per user.
5. Reason #3: A growing enterprise app store
Google enables software companies to create their own applications which interact with Cloudy
& Partners’ data. Clio andRocket Matter are two examples of this, specifically targeted at the
Legal sector - practice management software which hooks into corporate data stored with
Google.
Clio: one of the best practice management solutions taking the US by storm.
There are highly effective CRM, finance and HR applications available too, all provided on the
same cost basis - an annual user fee - with no hardware or data on site for the Cloudy &
Partners IT team to manage.
As more and more businesses Go Google (over 3,000 sign up each day), software providers
will be increasingly attracted to develop for the platform, meaning firms will be able to find
software which fits their needs closely.
Barriers to law firm cloud adoption
TradFirm, whilst recognising the benefits of cloud, chooses to remain firmly on premises, citing
these issues:
● Existing system integration - TradFirm uses a document management system, voicemail
delivery in email and digital dictation software - all of which interact with Outlook and
send/receive/store email. Integrating these with a cloud provider like Google would be an
expensive task in terms of change management and dollars.
● Security concerns - How safe is our data, who owns it and how can we be certain that
nobody else can access our intellectual property?
6. ● Loss of control - If TradFirm’s email servers start performing badly or drop out of service,
there is something that they can do about it, instantly. With the cloud model, you are at
the whim of the provider with the only respite being to log service calls.
● Australian Privacy Law. Recent changes mean that all Australian organisations
transferring personal information overseas must ensure that this information is given the
same protection as that provided under Australia’s privacy framework. TradFirm does
not want to risk being held liable for a cloud provider’s negligence or incompetence,
should data be compromised in an offshore data centre.
Are these barriers enough to stem the tide?
Google provides answers to the security and data ownership concerns, which are outlined on
this blog post. Google operates a 99.9% SLA, with severe financial penalties for them should
they miss this target - 2009 and 2010 uptime was 99.91% and 99.98% respectively.
Performance problems have not surfaced despite over 3 million businesses using the service for
their corporate email.
Google Apps and now Office365 are changing the IT industry. Just as you don’t keep a water
tank in your garage for that moment when you need a bath, why should your firm maintain
processing and storage capacity for 2,000 users when you only need to serve 150? IT services
are becoming a utility, just like water. Turn the tap, there’s your email account.
The barriers to moving cloud reflect nervousness, rather than fact - ‘what if’ rather than
‘because’. We’re all waiting for one or two more high profile case studies before we follow.
Firms that go first will realise savings year upon year of more than 40% on the cost of providing
email. They would also improve collaboration within the firm and between their clients and
suppliers - strengthening relationships. Are you ready to fly to the cloud?
About the author
Tony Brooks is a Google Apps Deployment Specialist, with over 8 years Legal
technology experience. He is the owner of Feynbrook, a company offering cloud
and data integration consulting services for law firms, businesses and nonprofits.
Further reading
Bradford & Barthel Press Release, ILTA Innovation Award 2010 for Google Apps deployment -
link Socialmind blog post - “Cloud storage and privacy - the dark side of the silver lining” - link
“Google Apps & Microsoft Exchange 2007 - Total Cost of Ownership Analysis (Radicati Group,
Inc) - link
How Google Apps improves productivity - “Measuring the Total Economic Impact of Google
Apps”, Forrester - link
Google Enterprise Blog - Getting Gmail to 99.99% - link