In most professional service sectors, the competitive battleground has already shifted. Technical expertise is assumed. What clients choose between is the experience around it: how quickly you respond, how clearly you communicate, how consistent the process feels from first contact to instruction.
Legal is catching up. And the firms that understand this earliest are building advantages that are increasingly difficult for others to close.
Where the competitive gap actually lives
Ask a prospective client why they chose one firm over another and they rarely cite legal quality. They couldn’t evaluate it before instructing you. What they could evaluate was how quickly you got back to them, whether the process felt professional, and how confident they felt after that first interaction.
The enquiry and onboarding stage is where most competitive outcomes are actually decided. It is also, for most firms, the least designed part of the client journey.
The 24/7 availability gap
Most law firms are effectively closed for two thirds of every week. Evenings, weekends, bank holidays. Enquiries land, auto-replies go out, and prospective clients wait. Some will still be available on Monday morning. Some won’t.
The firms with AI-enabled intake don’t have this problem. An enquiry that arrives at 11pm on a Sunday receives an immediate, intelligent response. Information is gathered. The client feels acknowledged. By the time the fee earner opens their system, the instruction is effectively already won.
This isn’t a marginal improvement. For firms in competitive practice areas, the ability to respond outside business hours is becoming a straightforward differentiator.
Consistency as a competitive advantage
In firms where intake depends on individuals, the client experience varies with whoever picks up the work. The partner whose team handles new enquiries well creates an advantage, but it belongs to them, not the firm. It doesn’t scale, it doesn’t transfer, and it leaves when they do.
AI-enabled intake delivers the same professional standard for every enquiry, every time, regardless of who is available or how busy the team is. The client who contacts your firm on a Friday afternoon gets the same experience as the client who contacts you on a Tuesday morning. That consistency is what process differentiation actually looks like in practice.
The referral multiplier
Clients don’t refer firms. They refer experiences.
The enquiry and onboarding stage carries disproportionate weight in how clients remember their experience of a firm. A prospective client who felt well looked after from the first point of contact is significantly more likely to recommend you than one who waited two days for a response.
The commercial implication compounds quickly. One additional referral instruction per month, at an average matter value of £2,000, represents £120,000 in cumulative revenue over five years. The intake experience is not just a client satisfaction tool. It is a growth mechanism.
Building an advantage that widens over time
The firms that are comfortably ahead in this area today built their operational infrastructure 12 to 24 months ago. Every month since, they have been winning instructions, generating referrals, and redirecting fee earner time from admin to billable work. The gap compounds in their favour.
Waiting is not a neutral decision. The firms that delay are not holding their position. They are watching it erode while the cost of closing the gap increases.
Karli is built for exactly this. Not as a cost-reduction measure, but as competitive infrastructure: a fixed investment whose returns accumulate with every enquiry handled, every instruction won, every client experience that exceeds what a competitor offered.
This is not a technology decision. It is a competitive positioning decision. The firms building practices that are genuinely hard to compete with are the ones that understand client experience as a commercial lever, not just a service nicety.
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