{"id":103510,"date":"2024-02-29T08:45:31","date_gmt":"2024-02-29T13:45:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.consilio.com\/?p=103510"},"modified":"2024-02-29T09:12:39","modified_gmt":"2024-02-29T14:12:39","slug":"consilio-finds-63-of-legal-professionals-waiting-for-human-expertise-to-catch-up-before-adopting-generative-ai","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.consilio.com\/consilio-finds-63-of-legal-professionals-waiting-for-human-expertise-to-catch-up-before-adopting-generative-ai\/","title":{"rendered":"Consilio Finds 63% of Legal Professionals Waiting for Human Expertise to Catch Up Before Adopting Generative AI"},"content":{"rendered":"

Many Corporate Law Departments and Law Firms Are Focusing On
\nGenAI Experience and Seasoned Tech Talent to Support Implementation<\/h1><\/h2><\/span>
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WASHINGTON, D.C. \u2013 February 29, 2024 \u2013 As adoption of Generative AI (GenAI) continues to grow across industries, the vast majority (63%) of corporate law departments and law firms are demanding an increase in human expertise before they are willing to utilize GenAI. A new survey by Consilio, the global leader in legal technology solutions and enterprise legal services, found that legal professionals cited the lack of experience around leveraging GenAI on the legal team (36%) and lack of the right tech talent to support implementation (27%) as key hesitations before using the technology.<\/p>\n

The need for expert guidance is due in part to a stark GenAI knowledge gap among legal professionals. Only 10% said their legal team is \u201cvery trained\u201d on GenAI.<\/p>\n

There was also hesitation among corporate law departments and law firms around whether the technology will work accurately given the risk for potential AI hallucinations (34%). At the same time, the survey also found concerns about data security (58%) and the potential for risking their company\u2019s intellectual property (30%) if they were to utilize GenAI.<\/p>\n

\u201cHistorically the legal industry has been cautious to not let technology outpace certainty in outcomes, so we\u2019ve been focused on diving deep into this new technology to develop the most defensible GenAI solutions on the market and ensuring our on-your-matter experts are well equipped to shepherd every technology deliverable we offer,\u201d said Andy Macdonald, CEO, Consilio. \u201cIt\u2019s clear from our survey that legal departments and law firms are looking for ways to safely utilize GenAI. However, without the right people as a guide, confidence it will actually work, strong data protections, and integration with your enterprise data, the risks of GenAI can easily outweigh the benefits.\u201d<\/p>\n

In fact, the survey found that 20% of legal professionals are waiting for wider industry adoption before they utilize the technology.<\/p>\n

\u201cData security and control are the lynchpins of responsibly utilizing GenAI in a corporate setting; without them the results can\u2019t be trusted,\u201d said Raj Chandrasekar, Chief Technology and Innovation Officer, Consilio. \u201cHowever, once the right fundamentals and guardrails are in place, the technology has seemingly endless potential applications, to drive efficiencies, process more data, and reduce overall business costs, making the technology the most impactful evolution of our sector since Technology Assisted Review.\u201d<\/p>\n

GenAI Insights and Efficiency are the Name of the Game<\/strong><\/p>\n

Despite concerns and hesitations, law firms and corporate law departments clearly see the potential that GenAI can offer, whether that\u2019s freeing up talent for more strategic work (48%) or reducing overall business costs (32%).<\/p>\n

As many enterprises are looking at ways to utilize GenAI, 28% of legal professionals are currently educating their legal teams and wider business on the technology\u2019s efficacy and benefits, and 24% are setting their strategy and getting consensus on GenAI deployment across the enterprise. Another 33% are currently focused on learning about possible uses with no definitive path forward yet.<\/p>\n

The survey also found that corporate law departments and law firms are interested in leveraging GenAI for multiple use cases including:<\/p>\n