Legal Work, Reimagined
The Software That Makes Lawyers Obsolete(Just Kidding, But Only Partly)
From the past few years, we have seen many changes in our daily life specifically among professional services that shook up our belief of how jobs could be done.
As my personal belief, I don't think lawyer is merely a knowledge worker. I see the lawyer as a philosopher shaping how the public thinks about rights, responsibilities, and relationships. This philosophical role is what makes legal work meaningful.
In the history of the legal profession, lawyers always have to adapt to new technologies to increase overall productivity and create more value for clients. Each time the adoption occurred, lawyers can do more work with less effort. Typewriters replaced handwriting and decreased human errors, telephones gave lawyers the power to communicate with every party more easily, personal computers made revising documents less painful. Lawyers have become dramatically more capable over time; we can already accomplish weeks of work in days.
But with AI, we believe that the next generation of lawyers could accomplish them in minutes not days. We will have new abilities that our parents would not believe exist. The progress will continue and force everyone to transform.
This issue hits hardest for lawyers working on deals and contracts at big firms or inside companies. These lawyers handle complex documents under constant pressure to do more with less. They spend countless hours reviewing documents, checking contracts, and doing research—time they could use to give better advice and build stronger relationships with clients.
Trust is the most valuable asset, Time is the most expensive expense.
Rainmaker is our attempt at addressing the latter. In doing so, we hope more resources can be directed toward the former. By reducing time spent on routine tasks, we want to help lawyers focus more on what truly matters: client relationships, deeper expertise, and the complex problems that require human judgment.
We see a future where lawyers will put most efforts on reading people's thoughts and actions, not documents. Great lawyers have always done more than process information - they see through two eyes and understand why clients act as they do. They inspect every cause and consequence, connecting legal issues to human realities.
Our approach is to find what's missed that most people did not notice and build to serve professionals. We're taking a different approach from generic AI tools. We believe legal AI should use judge's mind
We are learning and shipping tools with the goal of saving you time and bringing relevant knowledge to your desk. But we could not do it alone.
If you share this vision and are tired of routine tasks that keep you from your most meaningful work, we would love to hear from you and help. If you want to join this attempt, try our early access tools and book a call to share your feedback on how we can better serve legal professionals.
Vasu Cho