Archive for the ‘Lexis-Nexis’Category

Ahh … that New Lexis Smell


Today LexisNexis unveiled a partnership with Microsoft at LegalTech NY – the result is meant to foreshadow the complete revamp of the Lexis research system due out later this year, and dubbed New Lexis. In short, the company’s answer to WestlawNext, which was unveiled at LT NY yesterday. As a result of the partnership, a LexisNexis tab can now be integrated into the ribbon that Microsoft began using in Office 2007 and continues to use in Office 2010 beta as a substitute for the profusion of button bars in Office 2003. Users can conduct legal research, Internet searches on Bing and Google, even Sheppardize, all from within their Word, Outlook, or SharePoint document.

According to Clemens Ceipek, vice president of New Lexis, our customers spend their time … in e-mails or in Word creating or reviewing documents. That is exactly what we are doing. As a lawyer you no longer need to go to a separate, dedicated site to get the information.” Ideally this means that a user reviewing a brief in Word can click on the Shepard’s tab and confirm the status of all cases in the document at once. If the user wants to read the cases, clicking on another tab splits the screen and pulls up the cases. This same integration of information could extend to items within a firm’s own network or document management system in addition to items from Lexis databases or the Internet.

via abajournal.com

Posted via email from practice (redux)

WestlawNext. Where’s the Beef?

Reuters has been claiming that it’s “next gen” product WestlawNext will practically do your research for you, and as you know monopolies like Westlaw are famous for truthfulness so I don’t see why we shouldn’t trust them. Do you?

For instance, check out the above video. I couldn’t help noticing that there is nothing substantive in it, or in any of the company’s other marketing pieces for this product. Not the slightest attempt to tell me why this bill of goods is any better than the last one. Come on Westlaw. How do you look yourself in the eyes every morning? Fool me once, shame on me. Fool me twice … and I won’t buy your bullshit anymore. How about asking lawyers what they really need for a change instead of selling high-priced hot air? In short, I say #fail.

Posted via web from practice (redux)

You know you have a following when …

iPhone App Aggregators Compared

… websites that aggregate 3rd-party applications compete for your favor. Case in point,  the following 5 iPhone app aggregators are featured in this post on RWW

Chorus
AppsFire
Yappler
Appolicious
App Genius

This is where survival of the fittest takes on a whole new meaning. Even the folks at Read/Write/Web aren’t sure which one is the best of the best. Now, if only our industry inspired such creative aggregation, maybe someone would have a shot at unseating the Legal Research Duopoly that rules our lives.

Hey, a guy can dream …

Tags: ,

getting found online

search engine optimization

From Guy Kawasaki’s Alltop – some good advice about how to get found online:

  • Don’t Be Ordinary. Unique ideas will take you further than throwing money at marketing
  • Create Good Content. Blogs, videos, podcasts, social networks, and tweets get noticed
  • Optimize It. Optimize posts to be found on Google, Facebook, Twitter, Bing, Yahoo, etc.
  • Promote It. Post your content as many ways as you can and email it to interested parties
  • Measure Results. Act once, measure twice and keep measuring for continued success

social irm (definition)

Social Influencer Relaionship Management (IRM)

Social IRM Engagement Chart

Social IRM (noun) (so-shal eye-ar-em):  the discipline of managing relationships between influencers (ie: bloggers) and brands (ie: LexisNexis, Westlaw, etc.)
by offering real value with the goal of exciting, maintaining, and harnessing positive word of mouth. Used mostly by marketers and forward-thinking professionals.

Substantial Growth in Online Social Networking by Lawyers

According to the 2009 LexisNexis® Martindale-Hubbell® Survey of Corporate Counsel, more than 70% of lawyers are members of a social network; up 25% over last year. Largest gainers were lawyers aged 46 and over, who showed 30% growth. Over 50% of respondents think online networks have the potential to change the business and practice of law. 65% expressed interest in joining an online professional network designed for their profession.Survey results of note include

  • 1/3 of corporate counsel use a social network daily
  • ½ of lawyers in private practice use social networks daily
  • Most lawyers use social networks one or more times per week
  • Only 6% of lawyers Twitter, but 70% of that group twitters daily

The survey is available online at www.leadernetworks.comMartindale-Hubbell® Connected is the online network developed by LexisNexis Martindale-Hubbell.

Read the whole story here.