Legal Tech, Cloud, Legal AI, Automation & Efficiency
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Automation & EfficiencySeptember 01, 2022
Paul Hernandez is the President of Kalfus & Nachman, a prominent personal injury and disability firm with over 70 staff members and multiple offices across the state of Virginia. By taking a proactive and metrics-driven approach to his business, and leveraging legal technology, he was able to thrive during the pandemic and continues to drive success in the post-pandemic era.
Here are five tips we learned from Paul, a self-described “efficiency king" :
A big mistake, according to Hernandez, is when firms represent a new client and tell them to call when treatment is over to settle. He believes it’s an ethical duty as an attorney to actively manage the case, making sure the client is getting the medical care they need and acting as a translator between what the client heard in the doctor’s office and what they need to continue to do in their case.
His firm uses reports in their case management solution to shorten the time between when a client receives treatment and when they get their money.
Ensuring a client gets all the medical care they need, of course, also increases the value of a case. Without proper case management, Hernandez would not be able to keep a good record of all these details from logging case status milestones to tracking the case value.
Consistently and actively communicating with the client is huge. Using Neos, his firm communicates with clients via text messaging, among other forms of communication. He stresses the importance of good communication between all staff members and clients as the opposite is more than bad for business.
“To lose a legitimate case because your staff did not give the stellar service that you are demanding from your staff is heartbreaking,” says Hernandez.
For him, an important metric to keep track of in his case management is how many cases were closed without a fee. He believes in giving his staff autonomy in opening and closing files but is surprised to see several cases per month where cases were closed because the client left the practice because they were unhappy with something.
Hernandez credits his case management reporting with helping the firm adapt and pivot in key areas.
When the changes occurred, he wanted to take advantage of the efficiency of using this venue for cases that met the criteria. Turning to Neos, Hernandez quickly generated a report of all the firm’s current cases, factoring in criteria such as insurance coverage and minimum settlement value.
The reports showed which circuit court cases should be sent to the general district court and included details like a case number and notes. Armed with the report, Hernandez’s lawyers were able to quickly get some of the cases transferred. The best part of using this reporting was that he was able to achieve this in Neos in two-and-a-half minutes, without relying on administrative staff.
Hernandez uses case management software to track the firm’s marketing efforts and return on investment. He creates a case type called marketing that has all of his marketing spend in it, from TV to digital marketing.
He is constantly focused on cost per case. When the pandemic hit, Hernandez immediately called his buyer and cut TV advertising spend by a third. With fewer people driving, cases went down and Hernandez couldn’t continue to spend the same for fewer cases because that would negatively impact the cost per case.
As a large firm, Kalfus & Nachman runs a lot of television spots. He’s surprised by how many firms want to get on television and he’ll notice a firm come in for a 13-week period and then disappear for a year, presumably because they needed to spend elsewhere.
Hernandez recommends firms looking to get on television start smaller. For example, dominating a single program consistently rather than going on cable TV. He also describes the difference between buying a program and buying a demographic. He utilizes over-the-top (OTT) advertising, which delivers ads directly to viewers of a target demographic over the internet through streaming video services or devices.
The firm also tracks marketing dollars spent on social media. In their experience, social media has been great for mass tort cases, so he puts more effort there than with single-case events like car accidents. Without the ability to track this all in case management, he wouldn’t be on top of the numbers.
Because the business runs on word of mouth, database marketing is a top priority for Hernandez. He recommends firms spend a “tremendous amount of time with database marketing” which can be done directly from case management software like Neos, where contacts and mail lists are stored.
He says this is the best money spent because these are people who know and like you and your firm’s services. With television, you’re marketing to people who don’t know you at all.
One of the keys to success for Hernandez is to look for continuous improvements and manage them immediately. In addition to using case management to streamline cases, track marketing spending, and enhance communications, the firm uses Neos to track process and staff efficiency.
Hernandez mentioned that a while back he noticed staff members on the phone with the same hospital systems and insurance providers checking for balances. One day it clicked that too much time was being wasted on hold with these providers and worse yet, double work was being performed that could be consolidated.
“You have a ton of clients who went to that same provider, many others who went to the ER doctor, or even the same group,” explains Hernandez. “We used our software to create a report that allowed us to conduct balances not per client, but per provider. When that individual staff member has a stack of files he or she does balances on, instead of one at a time, they go, ‘hey, I’m calling on Client A and B and C.’ As you continue to do that, the efficiency in where now when they go to the next file half the balances are already done.”
Hernandez doesn’t need as many paralegals as some other firms because of these efficiencies. He’d rather spend his paralegal salaries on building client communications than data entry work.
Firms must use personal injury case management software to manage costs and profitability. By choosing the right case management software, you can:
Want to hear more? Watch Paul's on-demand webinar. Or, if you would like to discuss if Neos case management software is a good fit for your firm, contact us for an expert-led 1:1 demo today!
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