T Lex, Inc. has added enhancements to both its Matter Management Extranets and its TrialJuries web-based mock jury review system. These enhancements offer even greater power to attorneys who need to collaborate with their clients to manage legal matters, and to trial attorneys who seek a practical and efficient means of presenting their cases to an online "mock jury".
Brookline, MA (PRWEB) November 27, 2007 -- T Lex, Inc. announces enhancements to both its Matter Management Extranets and its TrialJuries web-based mock jury review system.
Since 1996, T Lex (http://www.tlex.com) has provided web-based solutions for law firms and corporate legal departments.
Its flagship extranet system provides a highly customized private web site through which lawyers can collaborate to manage litigation and other legal matters. Corporate law departments can use these extranets to work with outside counsel to manage matters more efficiently than in the past. Groups of law firms use the system to work together toward common efforts such as the management of mass tort litigation.
Effective today, new users of the T Lex extranet system will also include use of T Lex's GroupMondo Intranet as an additional benefit.
"Our extranets provide a great vehicle for clients to work with multiple law firms. GroupMondo lets each individual law firm manage its internal information and workflow, to staff its legal matters and get tasks done" said Lee Glickenhaus, President of T Lex. Glickenhaus continued: "The two systems together provide a complete environment for law firms to collaborate with clients and meet the demands of those clients in an efficient manner."
In addition to upgrading its Extranets, T Lex has also enhanced it TrialJuries online mock jury system. TrialJuries (http://www.trialjuries.com) allows attorneys to use the Internet to test their cases before a panel of jurors, before they ever go to Court.
The benefits of a "mock-jury" are well known to lawyers: use a focus group process to see how real people respond to a case before actually going to Court. Then use the results of this process to better prepare for trial, evaluate a case for settlement and more realistically assess the strengths and weaknesses of a case before moving forward.
Using TrialJuries, attorneys can "test drive" their cases before a panel of people drawn from the same pool of citizens that will make up the jury if and when the case actually gets to trial. Attorneys can try out their arguments and evidence, and receive detailed information about the jurors' reactions to their cases.
"The program is truly powerful. I always think the value of the mock jury feedback is in the narrative answers and discussion -- and our on-line session with TrialJuries was no exception" said Thomas Schroyer, a partner with Moss & Barnett in Minneapolis, Minnesota and an early TrialJuries user.
Today's enhancements bring a number of new option to TrialJuries' "Power Reports" which allow attorneys to analyze jurors' responses to their question along a number of individual demographic lines such as age, gender, race, income level and more. These new reporting options allow more ways for attorneys to view and examine jurors' responses to their verdict and feedback questions.
"TrialJuries was designed to make it easy and intuitive for lawyers to present their cases. Having practiced law for many years, I know that technology can often be a bit daunting to lawyers" said Glickenhaus. "We worked very hard to make TrialJuries intuitive even to the computer-challenged. In addition, by leveraging the efficiencies of the Internet, we can make our service substantially less expensive and cumbersome than traditional mock juries"
Contact: Lee Glickenhaus, President of T Lex, Inc.,
617-731-2930 or leeg @ tlex.com
T Lex (http://www.tlex.com) was founded in 1997. It develops web-based solutions for the legal industry, primarily customized extranets for Corporate Law Departments, Insurance Companies, Claim Management Companies, Law Firms and Joint Litigation Groups. These extranets allow lawyers to manage legal matters and collaborate over the Web.
Source: PRWeb: Legal / Law
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