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How Boutique Law Firms Can Use GenAI to Compete with Big Law: AI Webinars

How Boutique Law Firms

Terrific topic! This webinar from Lexbe tomorrow – discusses how boutique law firms can use GenAI to compete with Big Law!

Tomorrow, Lexbe will host the webinar titled (wait for it!) How Boutique Law Firms Can Use GenAI to Compete with BigLaw at 2pm ET (1pm CT, 11am PT). Join Lexbe for GenAI for the Boutique Litigator, a practical webinar focused on how smaller litigation teams can use GenAI to increase capacity, accelerate review, and sharpen case strategy without compromising professional judgment, client confidentiality, or defensibility. We will cover how to think about data security, context windows, RAG and vector retrieval, prompt design, hallucination risk, grounding and verification, AI-assisted document review, and how GenAI can support first-pass review and early strategic case analysis.

This session is a practical discussion for litigators who want to understand where GenAI can create real advantage, where it can go wrong, and how to use it responsibly in actual litigation workflows.

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Key Takeaways From Attending:

Let’s face it: Generative AI is beginning to change how litigation teams review documents, analyze evidence, surface strategic insights, and manage larger, more complex matters with smaller teams. For boutique litigators, this creates a serious opportunity, but only for firms that understand how to use these tools safely, intelligently, and in ways that build better cases. Register here to learn how boutique law firms can use GenAI to compete with Big Law tomorrow!

So, what do you think? Are you in a boutique law firm looking to compete with Big Law? If so, consider attending the webinar!  And please share any comments you might have or if you’d like to know more about a particular topic.

Disclosure: Lexbe is an Educational Partner and sponsor of eDiscovery Today

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Disclaimer: The views represented herein are exclusively the views of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views held by my employer, my partners or my clients. eDiscovery Today is made available solely for educational purposes to provide general information about general eDiscovery principles and not to provide specific legal advice applicable to any particular circumstance. eDiscovery Today should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a lawyer you have retained and who has agreed to represent you.

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