Commitment Over Curiosity: The Real Drivers of AI Transformation at Law Firms

Abhijat (Ab) Saraswat comes on the podcast to address the question that is on the minds of law firm innovation leaders: what makes AI transformation stick? On the surface, it looks like everything is going great. Training sessions, positive usage stats, vibe-coded POCs, vendor demos and pilots, some nice publicity on LinkedIn and at conferences. A law firm going AI-native. But underneath the surface progress is stalling. Cultural constraints, capacity limitations, technical debt, ineffective governance -- hidden icebergs are causing the AI transformation to stall out. Ab says that it all comes down to institutional commitment and use case clarity. It’s a helpful framing that focuses a legal enterprise on the key drivers for whether a law firm is able to deploy AI effectively. These drivers cut across a lot of dimensions: leadership style, organizational structure, build vs. buy, LLM and vendor-agnositic solutions, and building for an agentic enterprise are all part of the formula. These are the things that position legal teams for the future without having to make a “bet” on a constantly changing state of art.  It was refreshing to see the conversation go in some directions that I did not expect. Ab is not an advocate for the average law firm building the tech stack needed to developing their own bespoke tools. As he sees it, third party solutions are good enough and the added cost of making them great may not be worth it to most legal enterprises. Besides, building out the “middleware” of an AI tech stack that protects a law firm’s “secret sauce” is less about technical architecture and more about achieving the connectivity to tap into enterprise date and  practice intelligence. My sit down with Ab was a badly needed sanity check at a moment when things feel extremely fluid in the industry. I’m grateful for him coming on to share his perspective as a legal tech strategist (lupl.com (https://www.lupl.com/) ) and thought leader (fringelegal.com (https://fringelegal.com) ). LinkedIn (  / asaraswat  )