ChatGPT

Ten Things: “Cool Tech” for In-House Counsel (2025 Edition)

Hello my friends and welcome to another edition of “Ten Things You Need to Know as In-House Counsel!”  Every summer for the past ten years, I have written about “cool tech” for in-house lawyers.  It is one of my favorite posts and over that time I have stumbled upon a number of great bits of technology that in-house lawyers should check out.[1]  Over the course of the past 12 months, I have been keeping my eyes open for useful technology that will make you more productive (in addition to making work easier and – hopefully – more fun and interesting).  In my latest book, productivity for in-house lawyers, I devote a lot of space to how technology can increase productivity, reduce costs, and make your life as an in-house lawyer better. Simply put, I am a big fan of technology.  I say that with full disclosure that I am not particularly skillful with it.  I just like to bang away and see what works and what doesn’t, keeping the good and moving on from the bad.  Pretty much just “Joe Average” when it comes to understanding how it works – but good at finding ways to capitalize on the stuff that does work.

I know most legal departments operate on a tight budget, so when I am putting this post together I like to find and highlight technology that is easy to use and low cost – delivering big value with little effort or expense (though I also highlight at least one bit of technology that is a bigger lift cost-wise but likely to pay big dividends – and I do that again this year).  No shock, but a lot of the technology I highlight here in 2025 has some basis in AI and I think that will pretty much be the course for next several years if not more.  As usual, I make no promises or warranties of any kind, implied or express and you assume all risks associated with reading further (and I have an army of savage litigators at my disposal should something go off the rails – so keep those lawsuits to yourself…). I can also assure you that I get nothing for recommending the technology below.  I just think these are all useful tools and worth your checking them out.  Ready to get started?  Great, here we go with my “Ten Things” cool tech 2025 edition:

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Ten Things: 100 Practical Generative AI Prompts for In-House Lawyers

Over the course of 2024 and the first part of 2025, the questions I get most frequently from in-house lawyers are about Generative AI and how legal departments can use it to improve productivity.  There is a lot of pressure from the C-Suite on legal departments to adopt AI and show meaningful productivity gains.  While this is a noble goal, there are a number of issues with Generative AI that – rightfully – are causing legal department leaders to want to “go slow.”  Chief among them are concerns about 1) confidentiality, 2) attorney-client privilege, 3) trustworthiness, i.e., trusting the results, and 4) how do I draft “prompts” that get me useful results.  All valid issues that should not be taken lightly or dismissed out of hand.  Second, there is an almost overwhelming amount of information out there about Generative AI, making it hard (exhausting?) to stay on top of the latest developments in the field – so why not wait until things settle down before adopting?  Lastly, the technology is changing quickly, too quickly for most legal departments to understand the changes (and the implications) without a dedicated AI team – something beyond the reach (and budgets) of most in-house legal teams.  In other words, it’s really f$#@ing hard to figure out how to use Generative AI effectively!

So, how do we solve this problem?  In my experience, there are many simple and practical things you can do with Generative AI right now that can drive real productivity gains for in-house lawyers.  And while there may be an ever-growing list of more sophisticated and complicated uses for it, most legal departments are just looking to crawl and not sprint.  For most, crawling is perfectly fine and will get you a lot of useful results from Generative AI.  All of this is a big wind-up for me telling you I think I can help get you started crawling (in the “good” sense)[1] and that’s what I intend to do.  While thinking about this post, I realized it needs to flow differently than a typical “Ten Things” blog.  I’ll still give you ten things to focus on (in this case practical “prompts”), but it will take me a bit to build up to that part because there is some background we need to dwell on first.  Bear with me – I promise we’ll get to the good stuff!  For now, just sit back, grab some coffee and a Cinnabon roll, and set your brain to “learn.”  This edition of “Ten Things” will walk you through practical prompts for in-house lawyers:

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Ten Things: ChatGPT and Generative AI (What In-House Counsel Need to Know)

Hello again everyone.  I suspect a number of you out there have been wondering when I was going to get around to today’s topic.  Hell, even I was wondering about it.  Back in January, I identified ChatGPT as one of my top ten things for in-house lawyers to pay attention to in 2023, but I must admit that I am shocked at how quickly it has overwhelmed the debate about legal tech.  To be honest, I was hoping for a moment when the pace of “new” ChatGPT information would slow down.  It hasn’t.  And likely won’t.  But I think it’s important enough of a topic to at least try to take a snapshot of where things stand today for in-house lawyers when it comes to ChatGPT (or more generically, generative AI).  Back when I was general counsel, I would have grabbed a few folks on my team and said, “Let’s jump into a conference room and whiteboard ten things we need to know about ChatGPT.”[1]  As I have been thinking about and using ChatGPT, I realize we may need two whiteboards – there is a lot to cover!  What I have done is read a lot about it and I have tried it out a number of times with many different asks.  All to put myself back in the chair of an in-house lawyer and cut through the clutter to make sense of just what this tool is and what can it do to help me and the legal department.  So, get your dry markers out, grab a big mug of coffee, and join me in the conference room as this edition of “Ten Things” tries to set out what in-house lawyers need to know about ChatGPT (and be sure to click through the links and check the footnotes for – a lot of – extra information):

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