LEAP, the global provider of legal practice management software, announces the launch of Matter AI, a new, integrated software tool that intelligently examines LEAP matter correspondence, providing instant insights and information to legal professionals.
Users can chat with Matter AI to immediately access insights and information directly from correspondence in LEAP matters. Leveraging cutting-edge AI algorithms, Matter AI analyses all the intricate details within documents, and correspondence in matters, enabling users to streamline their workflow to deliver exceptional legal counsel to clients.
Matter AI can search documents, spreadsheets, emails, and attachments, it will OCR (Optical Character Recognition) images, scanned PDFs and even handwritten notes from 10 to 10,000 plus documents. Users then receive a detailed response along with references to the specific documents in seconds. Lawyers can bid farewell to laborious manual searches and embrace a new era of productivity and efficiency in legal practice.
Gareth Walker, CEO, LEAP UK comments,
“This launch represents a significant advancement in our commitment to equipping lawyers with state-of-the-art AI technology. Matter AI’s innovative capabilities allow law firms to manage cases more effectively, conduct research with greater precision and ultimately increase productivity and the quality of legal services they deliver.”
This advanced capability ensures accurate analysis, promoting a higher standard of reliability and precision in document review processes. LEAP users can ask Matter AI to:
- Check matter details and dates
- Draft documents
- Draft emails
- Summarise documents
- Compare multiple documents for discrepancies
- Extract key terms and concepts from documents
- Analyse financial transactions
- Provide a chronology
For more information, please visit www.leap.co.uk/ai.
This article was submitted to be published by LEAP Legal Software as part of their advertising agreement with Today’s Wills and Probate. The views expressed in this article are those of the submitter and not those of Today’s Wills and Probate.