Law firms Blue chip clients: cutting-edge tech will reshape law in five years as more jobs taken by intelligent machines Legal Business · 5 November 2015 · 3 min read TMT In-house Innovation In-house lawyers have been notoriously slow to embrace the tech-backed delivery of legal services, but Legal Business research drawing on responses from more than 600 global clients shows many believe technology will transform the way they work.Your limit of 1 article in 30 days is up. Please login for full access or subscribe. Corporate users - click here for simple access (no password needed). For more information, please contact [email protected] Related ContentMore in this category‘One engine, configured a thousand different ways’ – is Claude for Legal the next big shift in legal tech?Law firmsTom Cox28 May 2026Revealed: what top tech clients want – and the law firms delivering on thatLegal 500 dataTheresa Hargreaves22 May 2026A-list firms call the tune on Sony’s multibillion-dollar music catalogue acquisitionLaw firmsEliza Winter13 May 2026Vodafone UK head of legal Karen Thorpe on winning LB’s In-House Team of the Year and Vodafone’s ‘once in a lifetime’ merger with ThreeLaw firmsTom Cox28 Oct 2024Freeths, Freshfields and Vodafone take top prizes at Legal Business AwardsLaw firmsBen Wheway18 Sep 2024Guest post: Getting relationships right in-houseLaw firmsGuest Blog22 May 2023Revolving doors: Simpson Thacher, Latham, Sidley lead New Year London movesLaw firmsAnna Huntley9 Jan 2025‘Seize every opportunity’ – Paul Hastings partner Reena Gogna on City law, Suits and poetryLaw firmsAnna Huntley7 Jan 2025Five partners vie to succeed Hoyland as Simmons managing partnerLaw firmsTom Cox7 Jan 2025