Did Clearspire Expire…or Conspire?

Last week, one of NewLaw’s own, Clearspire expired.

Or did it?

Clearpsire says otherwise portraying the closure of Clearspire Law as one giant pivot from #AltLaw Firm model to a legal technology company. Clearspire explains that it plans to take the proprietary practice platform, Coral, developed by the non-lawyer owned business side of its operation and scale it so that it’s available for law firms all around the globe.

Some bloggers aren’t buying the spin, instead viewing Clearspire on a model that simply put too much focus on and money into technology rather than developing business or serving clients. Scott Greenfield, observes that”Clearspire’s demise [proves that] not every shiny new thing is a “game changer” and Brian Inkster, who opines that Clearspire’s costly $5 million investment did it in. In other words, though billed as a new model, Clearspire collapsed under the weight of too much overhead – the same factor responsible for the death of dozens of fledgling solo and small firm practices.

But Ivan Rasic of  Law Without Walls  posits this intriguing theory : that Clearspire didn’t expire, but conspired – that is, conspired to be a technology company all along. Rasic asks:

Now, what if Clearspire never intended to operate as a law firm / NewLaw service provider? They do mention on their website that they have used the law firm part as their “laboratory” aiming to prove the “concept that demonstrated just how innovative today’s lawyers can be.”

Though the commenters to Rasic’s post suggest that his idea is far-fetched, in my view, it makes sense. For starters, creating a non-law firm affiliate to develop and provide services to a law firm is hardly a novel – and in fact, it’s recognized as the quickest way around the prohibition on outside investment in law firms. That’s something that the foreclosure mill law firms recognized; they set up all kinds of outside technology and business services companies before Clearspire was even a blip on the legal profession’s collective radar 

Other firms have set up affiliates as a way to bill clients for the cost of overhead, which is generally isn’t recoverable. This type of arrangement resembles the Clearspire model as well: the firm transfers overhead functions, like secretarial work or accounting to the affiliate and then enters into a contract for services and charges clients for those costs as disbursements. Michigan regulators recently ruled that this practice is unethical because it passes overhead costs on to clients.

Still, Clearspire differs from these earlier iterations because it didn’t simply house its business operations in a separate entity. Taking the model a step further, Clearspire used its affiliated entity to develop and refine a software platform, with its law firm as a proof of concept for how the software would operate in practice. That’s not speculation either – Clearspire itself described that its law firm was really a laboratory.

So how does Clearspire’s model fare from a business perspective? Rasic gives Clearspire low marks for biz smarts, saying that Clearspire invested too much up front, contrary to principles of lean and tested its product on just twenty-five lawyers who were employed by the firm, which is far too narrow a sample to gage the product’s future useability.

From an ethics perspective – if that actually matters – Clearspire also flunks. When a law firm acts as a laboratory, that means it’s also using the firm’s clients as guinea pigs. When a law firm enters into a deal with an affiliate for a software product in which the firm’s members have a financial interest and then passes the costs on to clients through fees, that borders on a breach of fiduciary duty to the clients.

Granted, being exploited wasn’t a problem for Clearspire’s client base. After all, Clearspire’s clients were largely sophisticated corporations with plenty of options for legal services. Moreover, they are so accustomed to being charged enormous rates that Clearspire likely delivered enormous savings even with its pricey, client-funded platform.  

But what about a NewLaw company that decides to “experiment” with a new way of providing legal services to consumer clients? Let’s say that the Newlaw Company, using the same persuasive branding as Clearspire, reels in thousands of consumers who are promised that for an annual fee, they will have monthly access to their own personal lawyers through some novel software platform. Two years later, with the platform tested, NewLaw decides to shut down and focus on marketing its system as a freestanding free-standing product – or simply selling it to another company through a merger, leaving existing clients in the lurch.

Don’t get me wrong – I have nothing against experimentation; it’s what drives innovation and progress in the legal profession. But as our profession embarks on experimenting with new business models, it’s up to lawyers to make sure that clients don’t wind up as a source of involuntary investment or bodies for beta.

3 Comments

  1. Bill on June 11, 2014 at 12:34 pm

    Carolyn: very interesting post. I followed some of the links to the various blogs and articles on “NewLaw;” I confess to not knowing that ecosystem was out there. After reading several of the linked posts on new models and legal IT, I really came away feeling I was reading about a solution in search of a problem (at least for established, paying clients). Could the technology, and the use of technology, be better? Sure. Is technology remotely a major reason for the problems in law in general, and large law firms (where I spent 26 of the last 27 years) in particular? Not even close (in my opinion). Technology can certainly help make legal services more affordable to individuals with relatively simple problems, but is a peripheral “problem” for delivering legal services to sophisticated clients with complex problems. I am absolutely convinced that most of BigLaw’s economic problems (now and in the future) are the result of building a multi-national one stop shopping model for clients (large, sophisticated corporations) that don’t want to one stop shop for legal services, either geographically or by practice area. The resulting huge sunk costs and ongoing overhead in turn drive the leverage model (or, to clients, the “overstaffing” model), which in turn drives away more work. Lack of “cutting edge” technology? Never even comes up when clients are venting after a few drinks. (And, we shouldn’t confuse clients liking the cool NewLaw technology with clients caring about it enough to base engagement decisions on whether you have it or not; except perhaps the really cool early stage clients that can’t afford to pay anyway.) Hope this doesn’t come across as curmudgeon-ly venting….
    Bill



  2. Paul Spitz on June 12, 2014 at 9:19 am

    What was Clearspire’s business?



  3. Ivan Rasic on July 31, 2014 at 4:43 am

    Thank you so much Carloyn for the mention in your piece. Somehow I missed this one and only saw it now.

    Since writing up the post on LinkedIn I managed to get the perspective of some of the people involved in the project, which are truly amazing.

    I still stand behind the notion that for the biz-part customer development should have done more thoroughly before assuming lawyers and clients are ready for the new model of service delivery. Not to say that the industry and service itself is not changing, it just still does not change at the pace at which it could.

    Thanks!
    Ivan
    LegalTrek



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