Case Management - Return on Investment

Wouldn't you like to gain 15 minutes a day ...

Think of what that would mean. A well tuned Case Management system, no ... any Case Management system at all, will give you at least 15 more minutes a day of billable time.

Each call, note, thought, email is tracked and timed, so you can now bill for it.

Mass mailings and cards are now merely a "contact report" from your case management system, rather than a full week production

Drafting a new engagement letter is a matter of creating a client profile and "adding" a new document, using a formattable clipboard to fill in the blanks in the letter.

What Does 15 minutes mean for your bottom line?

Lotsa money ... Just run the numbers for the average timekeeper:

  • 15 minutes * 5 days = 75 minutes per week
  • 75 minutes * 48 weeks = 60 hours per year
  • 60 hours * $250 per hour = $15,000 for each timekeeper

That is $15,000 a year for each and every timekeeper in your firm. And that is money that keeps on ticking based on an assumption that you only gain 15 minutes of billed productivity per day. In reality, the amount of savings from a well-implemented system could be 1 to 2 hours a day. If you combine case management data with document assembly, you could find productivity gains in the hundreds of percent.

What are you waiting for?

Case Management offers more than money. It offers the power of information at your fingertips. It offers the "electronic file" that distinguishes you from the rest of the pack. It is all about client service that keeps those clients coming back for more.

Get More From Basha

If your law firm engages in lending transactions, you should really drop by the video tour of one of our HotDocs Lending Systems, that we have designed for other clients.  With a bit of time and effort, you can reduce handling times, increase quality of work output and improve your bottom line, all without paying another cent on staff.  Work smarter, not harder.  Get a HotDocs system designed by Basha.

Search Basha

Loading