The specific details of how Akerman plans to deploy AI internally—and which practice areas or functions will be prioritized—have not been disclosed. The firm's public guidance emphasizes starting with defined business problems, assembling cross-functional teams, and establishing governance frameworks, with most current law-firm AI applications focused on document review, legal research, and contract analysis.
For attorneys evaluating their own firms' AI strategies, Akerman's visible commitment to internal adoption and change management signals where the market is heading. As legal employers nationwide confront questions about AI's impact on workflows, staffing, and skill development, firms that treat AI as an organizational priority—not just a client offering—are likely to shape industry norms around implementation and governance. Practitioners should watch how Akerman's approach influences hiring, training, and role definitions across the profession.