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Truth is, the software that once helped you grow might be the thing slowing you down now. It’s normal, firms evolve, client expectations change, and what used to work fine five years ago might now feel like wearing shoes a size too small.
Here are five quiet but persistent signs that your law firm may have outgrown its current case management system:
1. You’re constantly working around it.
If your team is regularly exporting data to spreadsheets, using side systems to handle tasks, or relying on email and memory for things the software should be managing, then it’s probably not doing its job anymore. Workarounds are a sign the system can’t flex with you.
2. Small changes feel like big projects.
Need a new document template? A form update? Want to tweak a workflow? If you have to call support for every minor adjustment, or worse, wait for a developer, your system isn’t keeping pace. You should be able to make changes in-house, without breaking the whole setup.
3. New starters take too long to get the hang of it.
Your system should support a quick and confident onboarding process. If new staff are getting bogged down by confusing navigation, inconsistent processes, or clunky document handling, then you’re burning time, and probably morale, unnecessarily.
4. Clients are still chasing you for updates.
A good system helps you keep clients in the loop automatically, so your inbox doesn’t fill up with “just checking in” messages. If yours can’t integrate with client update tools, automated emails, or SMS, or just doesn’t make it easy, your team is doing extra admin, and your clients are feeling left in the dark.
5. You’ve started talking about “just putting up with it.”
Once your team starts adapting their behaviour around the software instead of the software adapting to them, it’s probably time to have the conversation. If your gut says “we’ve outgrown this,” chances are, you have.
It’s not always about switching everything overnight. But it is about recognising when your system is more friction than fuel.
If any of this feels familiar, it might be time to see what’s possible when the software actually fits where your firm is going, not where it’s been.
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