The Lawyerist Podcast is a show about lawyering and law practice hosted by Stephanie Everett of Lawy
This week, Sam chats with Paul Floyd, a lawyer who advises solosmall attorneys about business issues
On this week's podcast, Sam talks with Joshua Lenon, lawyer in residence at Clio, about how to asses
On this week’s podcast, Sam talks with Matt Homann, founder of Filament. Filament and Lawyerist are
Sam chats with Sam Harden about his solosmall firm and how to balance having a newborn at home with
On this podcast, Sam talks with Dean Strang, the attorney who represented Steven Avery in the case t
Sam and Adam Ziegler talk about the future of law and the challenges it faces through the lens of th
Sam and Jared Corella discuss the impact of smartphones on our daily lives and why it may be best fo
Sam and Julie Tolek chat about what it means to be a solo lawyerand how to create a brand experience
As more law firms go paperless, using cloud services for billing, timekeeping, and client files is c
Sam and Andy Mergendahl chat about the ever-increasing prevalance of Internet-enabled devices, other
Sam and Tom Mighell talk about how to keep your information—client data, finance documents, and othe
Sofia Lingos talks with Sam about how her firm provides outside counsel services to startups and sma
Chad Burton discusses how bar associations can help lawyers run their practices—and whether bar asso
Greg McLawsen discusses how he went about building an agile, virtual immigration law practice. Sam a
David Zvenyach discusses the reasons lawyers should consider learning to code. But first, Carolyn El
Jordan Furlong talks about the changes in store for the legal industry over the next 5-15 years, and
Megan Zavieh explains what's at stake in the FBI's quest to force Apple to build a backdoor to the i
Let's face it, a lot of legal conferences are pretty bad. You get a lot of presenters reading their
Some people who need to use the legal system want to go it alone, and a lot of those people call Mik
Sarah Glassmeyer is trying to get to the bottom of open access to law, and Ed Walters is trying to b