Mike Whelan, Jr. Mike has worked in logistics, solo law practice, and legal media. He teaches about the overlaps between those activities and what they mean for attorneys and the companies that aim to serve them.
Through his speaking, consulting, and writing, Mike aims to improve the lives of solo attorneys. The legal industry has many well-documented struggles. If we can harness the minds and compassion of solos—roughly half of the profession—we can have real impact on an array of social issues, including access to justice. That is Mike’s mission.
We think we understand the complexity of the supply chain, but that complexity in a weird way, feeds efficiency, cost control, and quality in a way that we just wouldn't expect. We think we're all artisans. And of course, in a big firm, [and] in law school, we're taught to be sort of artisanal.
Since people think of the supply chain as a chain, I would just say that a law firm can operate that way. And that's how I talk about it.
You know, there are handoffs, you collaborate with people outside of the firm. Somebody's overseeing it, which I think is fundamental to this thing working, but in my dream world, there's not just Bobby gives/does a project, gives it to Sally who does a piece who gives it to Bobby. In my dream world, there are feedback loops of information inside these communities.
So in big firms, they refer to this knowledge management, which different firms are better and worse at it. But, but that is a feedback loop. That is the big firms saying we can get smarter as a firm by capturing these things that we keep using. And our knowledge can grow exponentially as we work together with each other.
We're not just relying on the individual being really smart and individual silos, which is how a lot of big firms work because they're so specialized, but we can say what's the power of the network. And they're really smart. Big firms are figuring out how to do that.
It is just impossible to be available all the time and still do the work of expertise. And in our really complex, modern legal system. Clients expect both of those. They expect you to be a super nerd about the exact thing that they're dealing with because they saw that on TV.
And then they expect you to be incredibly responsive and there for them all the time because that's what Amazon taught them.
The Fringe Legal Podcast is a collection of conversations with legal innovators on how to put ideas into practice. Each episode is a discussion with a change-maker who shares their ideas, insights, and lessons from their journey.