The specific mechanics of AI deployment are no longer theoretical. Firms are actively using the technology for document review, legal research, drafting, and contract analysis. Industry data from Thomson Reuters and Harvard's Center on the Legal Profession suggest individual lawyers could reclaim hundreds of billable hours annually through AI-assisted work. What remains unsettled is the business model question: whether firms will pass savings to clients through lower rates, absorb gains as margin, or adopt hybrid arrangements that blend hourly billing with value-based fees.
For in-house counsel, the pressure is mounting. Clients are demanding transparency about AI use and measurable proof of efficiency gains rather than promises of future productivity. For law firms, the challenge is acute: AI adoption has moved from pilot phase to operational reality, forcing immediate decisions about pricing, staffing, and competitive positioning. The firms that clarify their value proposition beyond task automation will likely retain leverage in negotiations with increasingly sophisticated clients.