NewLaw firm Law Squared has unveiled a new legal tech solution designed specifically for in-house teams, a technology the firm says is a first of its kind.
Law Squared has launched Cubed by Law Squared, a legal intake, matter and contract management solution for in-house legal teams.
Built natively within Microsoft 365, the solution integrates with Microsoft tools, including Outlook, SharePoint, Power BI and Copilot, to manage intake, matters, contracts and approvals in a single platform.
Cubed is the first legal tech solution of its kind that is capable of out-of-the-box deployment in one day, and Law Squared founder and director Demetrio Zema (pictured) said the tool comes without high per-user costs and lengthy implementation times.
“We built Cubed to eliminate the friction that legal teams experience with traditional legal tech. It’s legal tech without the tech burden; familiar, secure and scalable so in-house teams can focus less on technology and more on what matters,” he said.
“Unlike existing CLM products that add complexity and cost, Cubed reduces tech sprawl by centralising legal operations under one roof – your existing Microsoft 365 environment.”
Key features of Cubed include rapid deployment, smart automation, driving streamlined legal intake, workflows and approvals, auto email filing with emails automatically filed to the relevant matter and enterprise-grade security, with user data staying within Microsoft.
Legal teams adopting Cubed will pay an annual flat fee with no per-user costs, and optional, one-off fixed-cost integrations with DocuSign, HubSpot, and Salesforce.
Through its integration with Microsoft 365, the solution also meets corporate IT and data sovereignty requirements, expediting IT approval without the need to introduce new technologies, added Zema.
“We’ve approached Cubed with the understanding that in-house legal teams and their stakeholders, like all consumers today, expect tools that are frictionless, easy to adopt, cost-effective and scalable,” he said.
Lauren is a journalist at Lawyers Weekly and graduated with a Bachelor of Journalism from Macleay College. Prior to joining Lawyers Weekly, she worked as a trade journalist for media and travel industry publications and Travel Weekly. Originally born in England, Lauren enjoys trying new bars and restaurants, attending music festivals and travelling. She is also a keen snowboarder and pre-pandemic, spent a season living in a French ski resort.