https://www.sikich.com

Choosing legal software? Don’t overlook your vendor’s business strategy

INSIGHT 4 min read

WRITTEN BY

Mary Jammati

Law firms rarely change core systems without a compelling reason. It typically happens when inefficiencies become impossible to ignore. Reporting slows down, workflows feel heavy, and onboarding takes longer than it should. When that evaluation for new legal software begins, most teams focus on what’s visible: functionality, integrations, and cost.

What often gets overlooked is just as important: the business strategy of the vendor behind the platform.

The hidden driver of your system’s performance

A legal technology platform is not static. It evolves based on the priorities of the company that builds it.

  • Growth-stage vendors move quickly, introducing new features and entering new markets. That flexibility can create opportunities, but it often requires firms to adapt just as quickly.
  • Mature vendors prioritize stability and predictability, sometimes at the expense of innovation.
  • Legacy platforms may feel familiar, but often retain the same structural limitations beneath a modern interface.

None of these models are inherently better. Risk emerges when your firm’s strategy no longer aligns with the vendor’s direction.

Where misalignment shows up

Misalignment rarely appears during demos or RFPs. It shows up after implementation, when the system becomes part of daily operations.

The early signs are often subtle:

  • Workflows take longer than expected
  • Reporting doesn’t meet leadership needs
  • Teams begin adjusting their processes to fit the system

Over time, those small issues compound, especially as firms grow, expand into new practice areas, or integrate acquisitions.

What initially felt like a strong foundation can become a constraint.

What executive teams should evaluate

Selecting legal software is not just a technology decision. It’s a long-term operating decision.

That means looking beyond current functionality and evaluating:

  • The vendor’s stage of growth, maturity, or transition
  • Capital activity and strategic positioning
  • Expansion strategy versus customer-focused refinement
  • Product maturity and roadmap stability

These factors influence how the platform evolves and how much change your organization will need to absorb along the way.

How to assess vendor direction in practice

You don’t need inside access to understand where a vendor is heading. The signals are often visible.

  • Product releases show where investment is going
  • Roadmap updates reveal priorities
  • Customer influence indicates how responsive the platform will be
  • Pace of change signals operational impact
  • Trade-offs clarify what the vendor is truly optimizing for

The key is determining whether those signals align with how your firm operates today and where it plans to go next.

Make the decision durable

Legal software decisions shape how your firm works across workflows, reporting, collaboration, and growth. The most effective firms don’t just evaluate features. They evaluate alignment between their own strategy and the vendor’s trajectory. Technology decisions have a long shelf life. A platform that fits today can become a limitation tomorrow if the vendor’s direction and your firm’s strategy begin to diverge.

Where Sikich fits in

At Sikich, we work with law firms at this exact inflection point, when technology decisions become business-critical decisions.

Our approach goes beyond vendor selection. We help firms:

  • Align technology decisions to long-term operating and growth strategy
  • Evaluate vendors through a business lens, not just a feature checklist
  • Identify risks tied to vendor lifecycle, roadmap, and ownership dynamics
  • Structure implementations that scale with the firm instead of constraining it

The goal is simple: help firms make technology decisions that hold up over time.

Looking beyond features

If your firm is evaluating case management, financial systems, or broader legal technology investments, now is the time to assess not just what a platform can do, but where it’s going.

Sikich can help you evaluate vendor alignment before you commit, so you’re not revisiting the same decision two years from now. Let’s connect.

Author

LegalTech Practice Lead and Sr. Director at Sikich a global advisory firm, Mary Jummati brings 25+ years of experience in legal operations, CLM, Case Management, and digital transformation—spanning both corporate legal departments and law firm environments. She helps organizations modernize legal service delivery through AI-driven technology, process excellence, and data insights, positioning legal as a strategic business partner. Known for leading complex transformation initiatives and building high-impact partner ecosystems, she focuses on delivering scalable, innovative solutions that drive measurable business value.