Legal departments evaluating enterprise legal management (ELM) software are no longer asking whether they need the technology. They are asking which platform will support the way their team works today...
Outside counsel fees remain historically elevated, even as the pace of year-over-year increases has moderated. Legal operations teams are now operating in an environment where cost pressure is persistent...
Many legal departments have invested time in standardizing processes, documenting guidelines and defining expectations. Yet even with these efforts, inconsistency often remains. Decisions vary by matter...
Many legal operations teams have made meaningful progress toward standardization. Billing guidelines are in place. Evaluation criteria exist. Budget expectations are documented. Yet despite these efforts...
Legal operations has never been more visible or more demanding. Budgets are tighter, expectations from the business are higher, and the tech stack seems to change regularly. For legal operations professionals...
* The views expressed in externally authored materials linked or published on this site do not necessarily reflect the views of LexisNexis Legal & Professional.
Legal operations has never been more visible or more demanding.
Budgets are tighter, expectations from the business are higher, and the tech stack seems to change regularly. For legal operations professionals in corporate law departments, “keeping the lights on” isn’t enough. You’re expected to drive efficiency, manage risk, champion technology, and prove business impact.
In a recent fireside-style conversation, legal ops veterans Elizabeth Miller, Head of Legal Operations & Strategic Enablement at Delta Dental, and Christy Jo Gedney, Senior Director, Strategic Counsel & Litigation Management at Liberty Mutual, sat down with Kris Satkunas, Director of Strategic Consulting with LexisNexis® CounselLink® to talk about what it actually takes to build a successful career in this space.
They’ve spent 20+ and 28+ years respectively in roles that didn’t even exist when they started. They’ve built teams, survived change and helped define what legal operations is today.
If you’re treating legal ops as “law-adjacent but less stressful,” you’re already off course. Christy’s definition is simple and spot on: Legal operations is everything that helps a legal department run, short of actually practicing law. That includes:
Elizabeth frames it as maximizing the potential of your resources: people, process, technology, and budget. Legal ops asks: How do we make this department as effective, efficient and valuable to the business as possible?
If you’re an attorney looking to pivot into legal operations, the question to ask is blunt and necessary:
⇒ Why do you want to be in legal operations, really?
If the answer is, “I don’t want to practice law anymore, and this seems adjacent,” that’s not enough. Legal operations is not a fallback job for people who don’t want to practice anymore. It’s a discipline in its own right.
To thrive in legal ops, you need to genuinely enjoy things like:
If those things sound painful, you will not love this work, no matter how much you like the idea of “strategic” projects. On the other hand, if you’re energized by fixing broken processes, connecting dots and making the whole system run better, you’re in the right neighborhood.
Someone once said, “Legal operations is not for wallflowers.” And, there’s a caveat. You don’t have to be the loudest person in the room, but you do need to:
Kris added a counterpoint: Wallflowers have one thing going for them…they’re observant. And that’s crucial. The job is equal parts watching how things truly work and then being brave enough to suggest a different way. Curiosity + courage is the core operating system of a legal ops career.
You cannot succeed in legal ops with your head buried only in your own department. You need to:
If you’re only focused on internal tasks and “getting through your queue,” you will quietly fall behind. Part of the job is constant horizon scanning: What’s coming next? What might hit us? How do we get ahead of it?
Christy’s advice to lawyers eyeing legal ops is simple: Learn how the business actually runs. Legal ops sits at the intersection of law and business. You’ll be more effective if you can:
Elizabeth’s background in finance made her a natural bridge between legal and the rest of the enterprise. You don’t need to be a CPA, but you can’t be allergic to numbers.
Attorneys know legal ops = metrics. That alone can put them on edge. Christy’s advice when you introduce or expand metrics:
Metrics should feel like a flashlight, not a surveillance camera. The goal is to help people practice at the top of their license, not to shame them in dashboards.
Legal ops often functions as an interpreter between groups that don’t naturally speak the same language:
Legal operations professionals translate expectations, constraints and risks in both directions.
That might look like:
Influence without formal authority is the name of the game.
The panelists agree that legal ops is basically a full-contact sport in change. A few of their core principles:
Major changes need visible backing from the CLO or other senior leaders. People look up to decide how they should feel about change. If leadership is lukewarm, everyone else will be ice cold.
Look for respected, collaborative people who embrace new ways of working and can influence peers. They’re your “fleet” to carry the message into every corner of the org.
Walking into a team and declaring, “You’re doing this all wrong; legal ops is here to fix you,” is the fastest path to resistance. Instead, listen, ask questions, and help them arrive at the realization that change is needed.
When something works, the people who own the work should own the win. Legal ops is often most effective when it’s slightly invisible. And maybe the most underrated tip: As your organization matures, your job isn’t just to be the gas on change. Sometimes you need to be the brake…slowing the pace to something sustainable and consumable.
Tired of “Have you seen this new AI thing?” conversations? You’re not alone. Elizabeth’s approach to shiny-tool burnout:
Do a budget reality check: No one is working with unlimited dollars. Every tool should either make your department more efficient or more effective in a way you can articulate.If it’s cool but not useful, it’s clutter.
There’s one part of legal ops that will never show up cleanly in a job description: culture. Yes, you’re there to optimize legal spend, implement tools and manage processes. But you’re also shaping:
Your career will go further, faster if you treat culture as part of the job, not “nice to have.”
If you’re building (or rebooting) a career in legal operations, you don’t need to do all of this at once. But you do need to be intentional. You might start with:
Legal operations isn’t for wallflowers, but it’s also not reserved for superheroes. It’s for people who are curious, brave enough to question how things are done, and committed to making legal better for everyone it touches.
The LexisNexis CounselLink events hub details current and previous panels and sessions that guests can view at their convenience. For a replay of “Build and Grow a Career in Legal Ops,” visit the events hub.
To learn more about the CounselLink+ enterprise legal management solution, used by legal operations professionals the world over, reach us and schedule a conversation about making your legal department more efficient.