They say you can't teach an old lawyer new tricks, but in the age of AI, it turns out the old dogs are learning the best ones.
This might seem counterintuitive. Shouldn't AI level the playing field by giving everyone access to the same information? But what I've observed working with attorneys at different career stages is that seasoned practitioners with specialized knowledge can leverage AI in more sophisticated ways than their less experienced colleagues.
I call this the "expertise paradox" – the more you know about your field, the more value you can extract from AI tools. As Fei-Fei Li, Co-Director of the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence, puts it: "Artificial intelligence is not a substitute for human intelligence; it is a tool to amplify human creativity and ingenuity."
One example involved a corporate attorney with 15 years of experience who had developed a meticulous process for reviewing commercial contracts. When we first discussed AI implementation, he expressed concern about maintaining quality, but his expertise allowed him to identify which elements of his process could be enhanced through AI.
What followed was remarkable. By explaining his methodology to an AI system and fine-tuning its approach through expert prompting, he automated a portion of his preliminary review process. The result wasn't just efficiency—it was transformation. He reclaimed 3-4 hours each week that had previously been consumed by routine analysis.
But what struck me was how he chose to use this newfound time. Rather than simply taking on more contract work, he invested these hours in deepening client relationships – meeting face-to-face, understanding their business challenges, and positioning himself as a trusted advisor rather than just a legal technician.
"For the first time in years," he told me, "I feel like I'm practicing law the way I always imagined I would. I'm connecting with my clients as people, not just solving their legal problems."
His expertise allowed him both to optimize the AI implementation and make strategic decisions about how to utilize the newfound capacity. This is a pattern I've seen repeatedly—the attorneys who benefit most from AI are those who already excel in their practice areas.
Another example came from a partner at a mid-sized firm who understood what information would help him expand relationships with existing clients. When we first met, he was exhausted from trying to stay current on all his clients' industries while maintaining his practice.
With his knowledge of client needs, we designed an AI-powered system that analyzed their CRM data, researched clients' industries, and identified potential legal needs that hadn't yet been addressed.
What made this effective wasn't the technology alone—it was his expertise in filtering the AI-generated insights through the lens of his relationships. The AI might suggest that a manufacturing client could benefit from intellectual property services, but only he knew whether the timing was right or if their current growth strategy made it relevant.
The human connection remained irreplaceable. As Robin Bordoli, partner at Authentic Ventures, observes: "AI is sometimes incorrectly framed as machines replacing humans. It's not about machines replacing humans, but machines augmenting humans."
The attorney's expertise-guided implementation resulted in a 22% increase in services provided to existing clients, with several clients specifically commenting on how proactive and informed the firm had become about their business challenges.
What these examples highlight is that AI isn't replacing legal expertise – it's amplifying it. The attorneys who benefit most share several characteristics:
For legal professionals looking to leverage this "expert advantage," consider these approaches:
I've seen these approaches work even for attorneys who initially approached AI with deep skepticism. As one litigation partner told me after implementing an AI research assistant, "I was afraid this would make my expertise irrelevant. Instead, it's making my expertise more valuable than ever."
As we look ahead, I'm convinced that the most successful legal professionals won't be those who resist AI nor those who rely on it entirely. Rather, the future belongs to augmented experts – those who combine deep legal knowledge with technological literacy.
Erik Brynjolfsson, a professor who studies AI's economic impact, frames it well when he argues that we should "see where AI can augment what humans do, using this technology as a tool to make a job better – whether more efficiently, to a higher quality, or more creatively – rather than replace it."
The attorney who understands both contract law and how to effectively prompt an AI system will outperform both the tech-resistant traditionalist and the AI enthusiast who lacks substantive expertise. This isn't just theory—I'm watching it happen in firms across the country.
When I reflect on the anxious senior attorney I mentioned at the beginning, I'm happy to share that he's now one of the most enthusiastic AI adopters I know. "I spent thirty years building my expertise," he now says with a smile, "and now I finally have tools worthy of it."
What's your experience? Have you found that your expertise makes AI tools more valuable in your practice? I'd love to hear how you're combining human judgment with artificial intelligence in legal work.