The Litigator’s Path Podcast
Matthew Letts is a UK solicitor who left private practice to build four companies — including a legal tech consultancy and a big data insolvency platform that's identified over a billion pounds in undervalued claims. He argues that AI gives litigators the chance to finally kill the billable hour and move to value-based pricing models like damages-based agreements. The question isn't whether AI will change how you bill — it's whether you'll do it on your own terms or wait until your clients force the issue. (00:00) Arthur and Matthew discuss whether AI tools that reduce drafting time threaten hourly billing — Matthew argues AI should kill the billable hour, not the lawyer using it. (00:41) Arthur introduces Matthew Letts — a UK solicitor with a chemistry degree who worked his way up from paralegal, qualified through the SQE route, and is now running four legal tech companies. (04:38) Matthew explains how handling escalated financial complaints sparked his interest in law, and how his wife's ultimatum led him to apply for a paralegal position. (06:05) Matthew breaks down the SQE qualification path: two brutal five-and-a-half-hour exams covering 16 areas of law, modeled after the US bar exam structure. (08:47) Matthew describes insolvency work as showing up to a complete car crash, piecing together what happened from conflicting stories and debris — it's a jigsaw puzzle with high stakes. (10:15) Matthew talks about leaving private practice to build a big data insolvency platform that identifies undervalued claims — a problem that's really a data problem, not a legal one. (13:07) Matthew explains his consultancy model: embedding domain experts inside law firms to fix what's broken and build tech roadmaps that actually get implemented. (15:56) Most small and mid-sized firms still aren't using automation that's been available for 15-20 years — Matthew sees this as a direct contributor to burnout and a massive commercial opportunity. (17:46) Matthew argues lawyers face two existential risks: competitors who adopt AI will take clients, and clients who buy legal services directly will realize lawyers weren't adding value. (19:45) Matthew's take on Harvey: it's been useful for firms to dip a toe into AI in a handheld way, but the price point doesn't justify the narrow functionality when cheaper alternatives exist. (21:33) Matthew recommends starting with Claude for idea generation, mapping your firm's repetitive workflows, and understanding which processes are deterministic (don't use LLMs) vs probabilistic (do). (25:45) Matthew's explanation for senior lawyers: treat AI like a brilliant day-one trainee — you wouldn't sign off on their work without checking it, and the same applies to LLM output. (27:41) Matthew gives AI the persona of opposing counsel to tear apart his arguments and find weaknesses — this forces the model to be critical instead of agreeable. (31:29) Matthew's frustration: most firms already have long process documents for different workflows — it's just a matter of picking the right tools and digitizing them without breaking everything. (32:34) Matthew argues that AI enables value-based pricing models like damages-based agreements — clients know exactly where they stand, and lawyers can detach revenue from hours spent. (35:48) Matthew describes his billion-data-point platform: it identifies strict liability claims from public records, runs 35 deterministic steps, and uses one probabilistic ML step for closeness analysis. (40:18) Matthew made national news crowdfunding a legal challenge after the SRA weaponized a solicitor's suicide attempt against them — he's now working with pro bono King's Counsel to fight the decision. (48:10) Matthew's closing advice: stay curious about technology, and if you think it won't impact your practice, be worried. About the Guest Matthew Letts is a UK solicitor and legal technology entrepreneur. He holds a BSc in Chemistry from the University of Sheffield and qualified as a solicitor through the SQE route. After specializing in restructuring, insolvency, and civil fraud litigation at Isidore Goldman (recognized in the Legal 500 for two consecutive years), Matthew left private practice to run four companies: Codified Strategy (legal tech consultancy), a big data insolvency analytics platform, a property law automation startup, and an ed tech company deployed in over 100 UK prisons. He's a LinkedIn influencer in the legal space with over 750,000 impressions in a single year and an advocate for lawyer mental health. Connect with Matthew on LinkedIn. About the Host Arthur Rothrock is a litigation attorney and CEO of Legion (legion.law [https://legion.law]) — an AI platform that drafts complaints, discovery, and motions for California litigators in minutes, not hours. Built by a litigator, for litigators. Try Legion See what your next complaint, discovery set, or motion looks like drafted in under 5 minutes. Book a test drive at legion.law [https://legion.law]. Connect Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rothrocka/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/rothrocka/] Email: arthur@legion.law [https://legion.law] Website: legion.law [https://legion.law] Music: lofi type beat "flower market" by snoozy beats
28 episodios
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