Legaltech News publisher Zach Warren uses this Yiddish word to describe one of the qualities needed to launch a legaltech Startup. In addition, he says, it takes vision and the ability to think oneself into the situation of the desired user as precisely as possible. There's a lot of truth to that.
Many founders fail at even describing their customers. You often hear "all lawyers" or "all attorneys". Maybe one should also generally move away from this customer group-based mindset and instead ask the question, "what pain are you trying to solve with your new product?" Then it's time to show your colors.
One example: from the current study by Wolters Kluwer, one can read that the standardization of contracting is a very important topic for law firms and for corporate legal. But why is that? Is it about the speed at which new contracts can be created, or is it about ensuring quality? In the former case, systems like Bryter or top.legal can actually help by analyzing the most important contracts and putting them into a question-answer grid with all the options provided. In the second case, it is more about the internal workflow and ensuring that all valid templates and text modules are actually stored and, above all, maintained in a defined location and that all employees are obliged to access only these quality-checked modules.
Certainly, the answers will mostly be ambiguous. But the message is: you have to understand your customer very well and know his pains as good as possible before you start developing a new software product. And exactly the same applies to customers facing the introduction of new tools. First define the pain and then deal with possible solutions!
With these meaningful words, Leginnside says goodbye to summer vacation. We will be back in mid-August. Stay healthy!
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