Compliance Resource · Practice Automation

The reason most attorneys haven't automated their practice isn't the technology.It's not knowing where the bar exposure starts.

The Bar-Safe Automation List maps every operational workflow a solo or small firm attorney can automate without compliance risk, and every workflow that requires your professional judgment. It's a reference document built for practicing attorneys, not a vendor pitch. No chatbot demos. No platform migration. Just the line, clearly drawn, with examples from each side.

Built for Practicing Attorneys · Compliance-Aware by Design · No Sales Call Attached
Practice Briefing
Reference Guide
The Bar-Safe Automation List
What solo and small firm attorneys can automate without compliance risk, and the workflows that require your professional judgment.
A Reference Guide for Practicing Attorneys practicebriefing.com

01 The Real Question

Most attorneys who've paused on practice automation paused for the right reasons.

The attorney who submitted AI-generated citations to the court and received sanctions made headlines because the underlying fear was justified. Bar rules on client communication are not ambiguous. The workflows that touch privileged matter data are off-limits, and any vendor who tells you otherwise hasn't built automation inside a law firm. If you've looked at practice automation and hesitated, that hesitation reflects good judgment, not a gap in your technical knowledge.

But "don't automate anything" isn't the answer either. At $325 per billable hour, three hours a day of non-billable admin (intake coordination, follow-up, document collection, scheduling) is $975 a day. Annually, that's over $240,000 in billable time spent on tasks that don't require your judgment and never show up on an invoice. The question isn't whether to automate. It's which workflows are safe to automate, and which ones aren't. That line is the entire point of this guide.

$325/hr × 3 hrs/day × 250 days = $243,750 in non-billable admin annually.

Most of those hours don't require an attorney. They require a system.

The Bar-Safe Automation List was built to answer the one question every serious attorney should ask before they build anything inside their practice.

02 Inside the Guide

23 specific workflows. Three categories. The compliance rationale for every one.

Every workflow in this guide is assigned to one of three categories. The categories are not suggestions. They're based on the specific compliance exposure each workflow creates.

Safe to Automate

Operational logistics only. No attorney-client privilege concerns. These workflows handle the administrative layer around your practice, not the substance of it.

  • Intake lead acknowledgment and scheduling
  • New client onboarding sequences
  • Document collection request reminders
  • Case milestone status notifications
  • Referral source re-engagement sequences
  • Past client annual check-in touchpoints
Use with Care

Generally low risk, but the templates need a professional eye before they go live. The automation logic is safe; the content requires attorney review.

  • Review request timing and language
  • Post-close past client re-engagement phrasing
  • Extended intake lead follow-up sequences
Never Automate

These workflows require your professional judgment. Any system that generates, sends, or routes these without attorney review creates liability exposure.

  • Legal analysis and case assessment
  • Strategy or outcome communication
  • Anything touching attorney-client privilege
  • Substantive client advice, any channel

The guide walks through each category with specific workflow examples and the compliance rationale behind every classification. You'll know where the line is before you build anything.

03 What the Guide Covers

Specific workflows. Specific compliance reasoning. No vague best practices.

How to automate your intake response sequence without creating representation expectations or triggering bar rules on solicitation
The difference between a case status notification (safe to automate) and a case strategy communication (requires your review)
Referral source re-engagement: why it's one of the cleanest automations available in legal practice and how to build it without touching client data
The exact phrasing to avoid in review request sequences, and the language the guide recommends instead
What "use with care" looks like in practice: past-client annual touchpoints that feel personal without creating unintended continuing representation obligations
The six workflows that carry zero bar risk regardless of your practice area and can be running in your practice within a week

04 Why This Exists

"The workflows that produce the most operational value in a law firm (intake response, follow-up sequences, referral source management) don't require access to any privileged information. The line is clear. Most vendors just don't draw it."

Practice Briefing builds operational infrastructure for solo and small law firms. We drew the line in this guide before we built anything, because the compliance question isn't an objection to manage. It's the right question to ask first.

05 Get the Guide

Download the reference guide. Free. No sales call attached.

Fill in your name and work email below. The guide is delivered to your inbox immediately: no phone number required, no sales rep will contact you, and no one will pitch you on a call you didn't ask for.

Please enter your first name.
Please enter a valid work email.
Please select your practice area.

No phone number required. No autoresponder chain. Unsubscribe in one click.

06 Straight Answers

Three questions attorneys usually have before they submit a form.

No. This is a reference document: 23 workflows, three categories, compliance rationale for each. There is no pitch inside it and no upsell sequence attached to the download. If you decide you want to talk through your specific practice workflows after reading it, you'll know how to find us. We don't chase.
No. The guide is delivered once. If you opt in to the Practice Briefing field report, you'll receive one email per month. Every email has an unsubscribe link in the footer. Your work email is not sold, shared, or passed to a sales team.
It's written for practicing attorneys. The workflows are drawn from legal practice operations: intake, client communication, referral management, post-matter re-engagement. The compliance rationale reflects bar rules and attorney-client privilege constraints, not generic professional services concerns. If your practice type is on the form, the guide is relevant to your practice.