The specific terms of the partnership and pricing structure have not been disclosed. Details about which firms or departments have committed to adopting the platform remain unavailable.
The move marks a strategic shift for Buchanan, which previously stated it had no plans to extend the tool beyond internal use. The commercialization matters because it tests a market opportunity in a profession cautiously adopting generative AI. Law firms remain concerned about confidentiality, accuracy, and governance—and Buchanan's value proposition centers on a governed AI assistant designed specifically for legal work with data kept private. Attorneys evaluating AI tools should monitor whether this model addresses the confidentiality and control concerns that have slowed broader adoption in the sector.