When you realise your firm is behind on technology
There is a moment that many Managing Partners and COOs are now experiencing.
It often starts with an AI conversation.
A client asks about it. A competitor announces something. A vendor demonstrates a tool that looks compelling. Internally, someone asks, “Should we be doing this?”
And the honest answer, just beneath the surface, is uncomfortable.
“We are not ready.”
Not because the firm lacks ambition. Not because the team lacks capability. But because the underlying technology has grown over time rather than being designed for where the firm is now heading.
That realisation matters.
Because it is not a signal that the firm is failing. It is a signal that the firm has reached the point where structure is needed.
You are not behind, you are at the start of the journey
Many firms assume they are late to AI.
In reality, they are at the beginning of something more important: moving from a reactive technology estate to a structured one.
At this stage, the priority is not to adopt the latest tools.
It is to stabilise what already exists.
Most firms in this position recognise some combination of the following:
Systems that work, but only with workarounds
Limited visibility of how data is stored and accessed
Security that has evolved rather than been designed
Dependence on a small number of individuals or suppliers
Uncertainty about how everything fits together
This is not unusual. It is the natural outcome of growth without a defined architecture.
But it does create risk.
And it makes every future step harder than it needs to be.
Why stabilising first accelerates everything that follows
It is tempting to try to move straight to modern platforms or AI.
But without a stable foundation, each new investment increases complexity rather than reducing it.
The firms that move fastest over the next few years will not be those who adopt tools first.
They will be those who establish control first.
Stabilising the estate does three things immediately.
It reduces operational and security risk, often faster than expected.
It creates clarity. Leadership can see what exists, how it fits together and where the gaps are.
It makes future decisions easier, because they are anchored in a defined structure rather than a series of disconnected choices.
This is why the first stage in our reference architecture approach is the secure cloud baseline.
Starting the journey towards a data enabled firm
Although this stage focuses on stability, it is not disconnected from the end goal.
It is the first step towards becoming a data enabled practice.
Even at this early stage, firms begin to see benefits:
More consistent handling of client and matter (or project) data
Clearer access controls and accountability
Improved confidence in reporting and information
Reduced reliance on manual workarounds
These are not headline grabbing changes, but they are foundational.
They create the conditions where modern platforms can be adopted cleanly, and where data can begin to be structured in a way that supports future AI use.
Without this step, AI remains theoretical.
With it, AI becomes a realistic next stage.
A structured path, not a leap
Not every firm needs to become fully data enabled immediately.
But every firm benefits from moving onto a defined path.
That is why we have developed three reference architectures for legal practices:
A secure cloud baseline to stabilise and reduce risk
A transitional modernisation stage to introduce structured SaaS platforms
A data enabled practice where AI can be used securely and commercially
The starting point is different for every firm.
The important thing is to understand where you are today.
What comes next
Once the baseline is established, the conversation shifts.
From “Are we stable?” to “How do we modernise with confidence?”
In the next article, we will look at transitional modernisation. This is where firms move away from fragmented systems towards a more structured, integrated platform model.
If you suspect your firm is at the start of this journey, the simplest step is to understand your current position.