Growing Your Personal Injury Caseload Without Growing Your Headcount

Growing your personal injury caseload creates a problem most firms don’t see coming. Settlements take months, sometimes years. Cash flow is unpredictable. Hiring ahead of demand is a risk many firms can’t absorb. And even when the timing is right, finding skilled PI attorneys and experienced paralegals is increasingly difficult in a market where qualified […]
How Vendor Workflow Failures Cost Law Firms (Before Anyone Notices)

Workflow failures rarely begin with dramatic breakdowns. They start with small corrections: rejected filings, delayed updates, missing details that shift work back to the firm. This article examines how minor vendor disruptions snowball into workflow slowdowns, and why the earliest warning signs are often the easiest to miss.
From 10 Steps to 4: How PI Firms Are Cutting Filing and Serving Workflows in Half

Ask any legal professional at a personal injury firm to walk you through their filing and serving workflow, and you’ll hear a familiar story. E-file with the court. Wait for conformed copies. Download and upload to the document management system (DMS). Initiate service of process separately. Track the serve. Chase the status. Receive proof. File […]
What You Need to Know About Process Serving in Divorce Cases

Divorce process serving demands precision, discretion, and risk control. This guide breaks down who can serve, how it’s done, and what legal teams need to get it right.
Private Process Server vs Sheriff: Which Service to Use

Both process servers and sheriffs can serve legal documents, but the service they provide isn’t exactly the same. Sheriffs and their deputies are responsible for getting accurate information about the person to whom they will serve papers, just like independent process servers. However, working with a sheriff isn’t always the most efficient option.