Law Next

Hosted ByRobert Ambrogi

Robert Ambrogi interviews the innovators and entrepreneurs who are driving the future of law.

“[This] podcast is a must-listen for lawyers, law professors, and law students. Always thought-provoking, and Bob is as experienced a podcast host as you will find. Can’t recommend highly enough.”

Ed Walters, CEO, Fastcase

All Episodes

Ep 156: How Legal Departments Can Use Data to Drive Smarter Decision-Making, with Jeffrey Solomon of Wolters Kluwer

As head of managed services and analytics at , oversees a database that tracks over $150 billion in legal spend data. Legal departments are able to use this data in multiple ways, including to benchmark outside firms’ billing rates and to evaluate…

Ep 155: As Time By Ping Raises $36.5M, Exclusive Interview with CEO Ryan Alshak

As , a company devoted to helping lawyers break free from timekeeping, announces its Series B raise of $36.5 million, cofounder and CEO joins LawNext for an exclusive interview about the financing, the company, and its mission to help lawyers break…

Ep 154: Former Tesla Lawyer Laura Frederick on How to Teach Contracting Skills for the Real World

Is there a better way to train lawyers to draft and negotiate contracts? Laura Frederick thinks so. This former Tesla and BigLaw commercial contracts attorney is the founder of , a learning platform that trains lawyers and professionals how to draft…

Ep 153: From Radical to Trailblazer: How Innovative GC Jeffrey Carr Disrupted the Legal Department, Part 2

In this second of a two-part interview, we continue our conversation with , a trailblazing general counsel who describes his career as decades spent on the radical fringe of reforming legal services delivery. Many of his ideas for revamping legal…

Ep 152: From Radical to Trailblazer: How Innovative GC Jeffrey Carr Disrupted the Legal Department, Part 1

One of the most innovative general counsel ever, describes his career as decades spent on the radical fringe of reforming legal services delivery. Yet many of his ideas for revamping legal departments, once viewed as radical, have now become…