Alternative Legal Services (ALS) are reshaping how legal work gets done by blending people, processes, and technology.
Rather than relying solely on traditional law-firm models, corporate legal teams and firms are turning to specialized providers and platforms to handle routine, high-volume, or technically complex tasks. The result: greater cost efficiency, faster turnaround, and improved capacity for strategic work.
What ALS covers
Alternative Legal Services is an umbrella term that includes:
– Legal process outsourcing (LPO) and offshoring for document review, contract management, and regulatory filings
– Contract attorneys and flexible staffing for temporary surges or specialized matters
– Managed legal services offering ongoing, packaged support under alternative fee arrangements
– Legal technology platforms for eDiscovery, contract lifecycle management (CLM), and matter management
– Knowledge-process outsourcing for legal research, due diligence, and compliance workflows
– Consulting and legal operations services that optimize workflows, vendors, and budgets
Why organizations choose ALS
ALS delivers measurable benefits for both law firms and corporate legal departments. Key advantages include:
– Cost control: Alternative fee structures and lower-cost providers reduce predictable expenses for routine tasks.
– Scalability: Teams can flex capacity up or down without the overhead of hiring and training full-time staff.
– Speed and efficiency: Standardized workflows and automation shorten turnaround on high-volume work such as discovery and contract review.
– Access to expertise: Providers often specialize in verticals or technical niches—IP, regulatory, investigations—bringing seasoned resources quickly.
– Focus on high-value work: By outsourcing repeatable tasks, in-house counsel and firm partners can devote more time to strategy and client relationships.
Managing risk and quality
ALS introduces new governance needs.
To protect outcomes and reputation, follow these practices:
– Define SLAs and quality metrics up front (accuracy rates, turnaround time, escalation paths).
– Ensure data security and compliance with confidentiality, cross-border transfer, and industry regulations.
– Maintain single-point project managers or legal ops leads to coordinate vendors and internal teams.

– Run phased pilots before scaling to validate workflows and cultural fit.
How to pick the right provider
Selecting a vendor or platform matters as much as the decision to outsource. Consider:
– Domain expertise and relevant case studies rather than generalist claims
– Transparent pricing and clear scope to avoid scope creep
– Technology stack compatibility—APIs, matter management integration, security certifications
– References and third-party audits or client satisfaction metrics
– Flexibility in staffing models and the ability to scale on short notice
Measure success with meaningful KPIs
Track both financial and qualitative metrics to assess ALS impact:
– Cost per matter or task versus historical baselines
– Time-to-completion reductions and cycle time variance
– Error rates, rework levels, and dispute frequency
– Internal satisfaction scores from stakeholders and end-users
Getting started
A low-risk path is to pilot ALS on a narrowly scoped, high-volume process—contract intake, standardized due diligence, or initial eDiscovery review. Use the pilot to refine SLAs, integrate tools, and prove ROI.
When managed well, Alternative Legal Services become a strategic lever that reduces cost, improves service delivery, and lets legal teams focus on outcomes that drive business value.