
Artificial intelligence (AI) only benefits the legal department if it is implemented correctly.
The technology promises to automate time-consuming routine work and fundamentally improve the quality of legal work through data-supported analyses. However, this enormous potential can only be unleashed if there is a strategy behind it. To this end, the legal department, IT and change management should work closely together from the outset. The team should first identify feasible use cases and define measurable KPIs.
With these use cases, lawyers are already achieving measurable relief:
Despite its impressive performance, AI is not a panacea. It has limits, especially if it is to be used safely and responsibly.
Challenge: Contracts, expert opinions and internal correspondence often exist in isolated systems and in unstructured form. This makes it difficult to use this information for AI applications and to link it to a consistent knowledge base in compliance with data protection regulations.
Solution: Introduction of strategic data governance with a comprehensive data inventory. The aim is to create a uniform structure and clear rules for storing, processing and accessing sensitive information.
Challenge: With freely available AI or cloud solutions, there is a risk of violating legal requirements such as GDPR, attorney-client privilege, trade secret law and internal guidelines on handling proprietary know-how.
Solution: Selection of technical solutions that guarantee GDPR-compliant, secure data storage and processing. Contractual and technical safeguards must ensure that legal data does not leave the defined IT system, is not used for model training and that the legal department retains full control over data access at all times.
The challenge of AI calls the traditional way of working into question. Not everyone is equally open to new things and not everyone is tech-savvy.
Solution: The change that AI requires is a long-term strategic project and should be communicated as such. Instead of general training, user-specific training should be provided that uses AI to process specific use cases from everyday work more efficiently and thus demonstrably relieve the burden, for example when reviewing NDAs. This results in immediate quick wins, where lawyers feel a direct added value in their daily work. This increases acceptance. It is important that employees understand the control mechanisms and use AI confidently as a tool.
Challenge: Companies are faced with the task of integrating AI solutions in such a way that they seamlessly support existing processes. General AI bots offer an impressive range of possible applications – from text reformulation and checking NDAs to analyzing codes of conduct. They are already established in many organizations. Their versatility makes them a valuable tool in day-to-day work, even if the technical connection to existing systems is not always complete. Special solutions, on the other hand, are highly tailored to individual tasks, process them particularly efficiently and often have custom-fit interfaces to relevant systems such as document management, ERP or email clients.
Solution: The choice between a general AI bot and a special solution should be based on the specific use cases. The value of general AI bots lies in their broad support for a wide range of tasks and the noticeable relief they provide in day-to-day business. Specialist solutions score points thanks to their precise focus and deep integration into existing systems, making them particularly powerful in their area of application. Both approaches can create considerable added value, whether through time savings, quality improvements or the optimization of processes. A clearly defined target image of the legal tech architecture ensures that the chosen solution is optimally embedded in the IT landscape and supports the central processes in the long term.
The transition to an AI-supported legal department requires the integration of technology, strategy and people.
Senior Manager
Tersteegenstraße 19-23
40474 Düsseldorf
Tel.: +49 211 4155597-527
michaelroth1@kpmg-law.com
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