Posts Tagged ‘business model’
Big law is having its Uber moment – Macleans.ca
AI-powered tools are potentially more accurate. Whether they realize it or not, even the sharpest lawyers inevitably bring their own biases to legal research. That, in turn, skews their ability to realistically gauge their chances before judges, who harbour their own preconceived notions of how law should be applied. Tax Foresight, by contrast, isn’t concerned with how a judge should rule, but rather what’s the most likely outcome based on past experience. It’s essentially Moneyball for tax lawyers.
Source: Big law is having its Uber moment – Macleans.ca
Read MoreArtificial Intelligence & Traditional Law Firms
“People don’t have to worry,” says Khalid Al-Kofahi, vice-president, R&D at the Thomson Reuters Centre for Cognitive Computing, a new technology centre that will focus on research in machine perception, reasoning, knowledge management and human-computer interfaces. “Most of the innovations in artificial intelligence and machine learning will introduce automation at the task level, which will allow people to focus on more complex tasks.”
All of this does not bode well for traditional law firms. A recent global research study by Deloitte concluded that conventional law firms are no longer meeting today’s business needs. The majority (55 per cent) of participants in the study — legal counsel, CEOs and CFOs — have taken or are considering a significant review of their legal suppliers. The study also points out that purchasers of legal services want better and more relevant technologies, to be used and shared on integrated platforms.
The drive toward AI, however incrementally, will likely also mean that law firms are going to have to review their traditional billing model, says Furlong. The time when law firms were the only game in town, where lawyers were the “only vehicle” by which legal services could be delivered, is coming to a close, and AI is going to help to put that to an end, he says. “All of these innovations like artificial intelligence are going to reduce the amount of time and amount of effort required to obtain a legal outcome, so the very lax business model of selling time and expertise, rather than outcomes and results, is coming to an end.”
Source: Artificial intelligence | Canadian Lawyer
Read MoreSteve Blank – The 11 Bad Habits Killing Innovation in Your Company
Big companies have great execution habits to manage and improve successful business models and value propositions. But the habits that foster execution can easily kill new growth initiatives inside your company.
Source: Steve BlankThe 11 Bad Habits Killing Innovation in Your Company
Read MoreSteve Blank – The Mission Model Canvas – An Adapted Business Model Canvas for Mission-Driven Organizations
Read MoreThe Business Model Canvas has served all of us well in thinking about building businesses – and therein lies the problem. In a business the aim is to earn more money than you spend. What if you’re a government or a military organization or part of the intelligence community? In these cases you don’t earn money, but you mobilize resources and a budget to solve a particular problem and create value for a set of beneficiaries (customers, support organizations, warfighters, Congress, the country, etc.)
Steve Blank – No Business Plan Survives First Contact With Customers. 2 Minutes to See Why
Part I: Validate Your Business Model Start With a Business Model, Not a Business Plan – The Accelerators – WSJ
Read MoreA business model describes how your company creates, delivers and captures value. A business model is designed to change rapidly to reflect what you find outside the building in talking to customers. It’s dynamic and it reflects the iterative reality that startups face. Business models allow agile and opportunistic founders to keep score of the pivots in their search for a repeatable business model.
Blockbuster laughed at Netflix partnership offer – CNET
But ask Antioco. Netflix’s management is not a group to take too lightly. There were signs of this in 2000 but apparently Blockbuster managers overlooked them…
McCarthy told the Unofficial Stanford blog that for Blockbuster it was a classic case of the the innovator’s dilemma: “You end up competing with a business that you initially ignored.”
Source: Blockbuster laughed at Netflix partnership offer – CNET
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