10 Things Every Lawyer Should Know About Legal Software-as-a-Service (SaaS)

If you are considering using Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) in your practice or if you are just interested in learning more about it, you should check out the following “10 Things Every Lawyer Should Know About Legal SaaS”:

  1. What is Software-as-a-Service? A discussion of what exactly Software-as-a-Service is, and how it compares to the more traditional desktop computing model.
  2. Why (Or Why Not) Choose a SaaS Solution? Why SaaS offers compelling advantages over traditional desktop software solutions, and some of the compromises that have to be considered.
  3. Why Web-Based Practice Management? Why Software-as-a-Service is a perfect fit for practice management, particularly for solos and small firms.
  4. Security. An outline key concepts and terminology for web-based security, including SSL, server security, client security, and password security.
  5. Privacy. What you should be looking for in a web site’s privacy policies.
  6. Data Availability. An outline of the answers you want to be hearing when you ask your SaaS provider “What are you doing to ensure that my data remains available, even in the event of a natural- or human-induced disaster?“
  7. Total Cost of Ownership. An explanation of how to compare costs of SaaS to traditional desktop software via a Total Cost of Ownership calculation.
  8. Terms of Service. What to look for in the legal agreement describing the services your SaaS provider will provide you.
  9. Data Migration. How you can migrate your data from existing desktop software application to the web.
  10. Offline Access. Why offline access is important, and an outline of some of the technologies that make offline access to SaaS applications possible.

This series was published by the folks at Clio, and it is available via e-book, Word doc, or PDF doc (thanks to JD Supra),

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Lego Ohm - July 6, 2009 2:48 PM

These are all great things for a lawyer to know, especially since the profession, in general, gets a pretty bad rap. Being and sound prepared is a great way to change that, the industry needs more articles like this written about it: http://lawblog.legalmatch.com/2009/06/18/trusting-americas-lawyers/

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