Legal Document Reviewer
Law firms lose hours to junior lawyers manually reading contracts, flagging clauses, and cross-checking terms. This agent handles that first-pass review, pulling out key dates, parties, and risk areas so your team focuses on the legal thinking, not the reading.
About Legal Document Reviewer
The Problem
Contract review is one of the biggest time sinks in legal practice. A single due diligence exercise can involve hundreds of documents, and even routine lease or employment agreements need careful clause-by-clause review. Junior lawyers spend hours on this work, and the firm bills for it, but clients are increasingly pushing back on the cost of what they see as mechanical review.
Missed clauses or inconsistent terms create real risk, too. When a team is reviewing dozens of contracts under time pressure, things get overlooked.
How It Works
The agent reads contracts and legal documents, then extracts the information that matters: key dates, party names, obligations, termination clauses, indemnities, and anything that deviates from your standard templates. It flags risks, missing clauses, and inconsistencies, then produces a structured summary your lawyers can review in minutes rather than hours.
It connects with document management systems like iManage and NetDocuments, so it fits into existing workflows without forcing your team onto a new platform.
Freeing Up Billable Hours
The real value here is straightforward: your senior lawyers spend their time on the work that actually requires their expertise. Complex negotiations, strategic advice, client relationships. The agent handles the initial document triage that used to eat into those hours. For firms operating on billable hour models, that shift matters. You are not reducing headcount. You are making better use of the people you already have.
If you are looking at how AI fits into a legal practice, talk to our AI consulting team about what is realistic for your firm.