Editor’s note: This article originally appeared on Hypepotamus. It is published on Global Atlanta as part of our content partnership with the Southeast’s top source for innovation news. Sign up for Hypepotamus newsletters here.
Yash Singhal, a recent graduate of Georgia Tech’s computer science program, is ready to streamline the legal world, one document at a time.
He co-founded the SaaS startup CaseDocker as an end-to-end workflow management platform for law firms and corporations to keep track of their contracts, litigation matters, notices, and compliance documents.
“[Most companies] use two to three messaging platforms to communicate with their team. They use various platforms to store their data, including Google Drive and Outlook, and then they just message documents to each other,” he told Hypepotamus. “And then a lot of the players in the market – especially those in the financial and manufacturing sector – have a lot of their legal paperwork and their contracts in physical paper form. They have been struggling to digitize everything.”
Efficiently is the name of the game for users of CaseDocker.
Instead of jumping between different platforms and various email chains, teams and their clients can efficiently communicate from within CaseDocker. The platform also integrates with a company’s ERP (enterprise resource planning) systems and firms can use the CaseDocker to track the lifecycle of a contract to ensure it is fulfilled.
With the integration of artificial intelligence, users can more easily work through the litigation process and initial draft contracts. That is particularly important because case precedence can make or break a court ruling. Integrating AI into the drafting process can also save in-house legal teams hours, Singhal said.
Singhal said that CaseDocker clients have seen a 60 percent reduction in time spent on drafting and contracts, and have “reduced their…
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