In Major Redesign, Bloomberg Law Streamlines Its Search Interface
It will be easier to conduct searches and to find specific types of content.
It will be easier to conduct searches and to find specific types of content.
New columnist Scott Mozarsky reflects on how globalization and technology are changing the legal profession.
Grounded in authoritative content and verified at every step, Protégé is the only legal AI tool that delivers work you can trust—without exception.
Bob Ambrogi interviews Scott Mozarsky, the new head of Bloomberg BNA's Legal Division.
This is the first litigation analytics product to be included within a comprehensive legal research platform.
If you handle civil litigation in federal court, you need to know about this great new resource.
All lawyers need to care about business development -- but what should you do about it?
LexisNexis sat down with John Ursin, Managing Partner at Schenck Price, to learn how the firm is using legal AI to strengthen client service and daily legal work.
Maybe you dread making "cold calls" -- but it's far easier than you think to turn "cold" conversations into warm ones, according to columnist David Perla.
For those with an appetite for risk, there is limitless potential within the practice of law, according to columnist David Perla.
In order to seize existing and emerging opportunities, law students must educate themselves in topics—from marketing to finance to Six Sigma—that might become relevant to their pursuits.
Please welcome David Perla, president of Bloomberg Law and Bloomberg BNA’s Legal division, to the pages of Above the Law.
Legal work isn’t slowing down, and the firms that win won’t be the ones working harder — they’ll be the ones working smarter.
Legal technology continues to attract a small community of passionate individuals, like David Perla of Bloomberg BNA.
In advance of the big ILTA conference, we interviewed David Perla of Bloomberg BNA about the future of law and technology.
This new tool for transactional lawyers may be a game changer.
A legal battle brews over what you flush down the toilet.
Can lawyers really unionize? And what are the implications of attorney unionization for the industry as a whole?