Questions
Every question attorneys ask, answered directly.
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What is Execute? +
Execute builds intelligent automation to create autonomous law firms for lawyers. Inside your firm it works like a hire, not a system: it detects the work each case needs, drafts the documents, and tracks every matter from intake through resolution. The attorney reviews and approves. Everything else is executed. The longer answer: what is an autonomous law firm?
Is Execute a case management system? +
No, and it does not replace yours. Your case management system remains the system of record. Execute works across the software your firm already runs and puts the finished work back where your firm keeps it. No migration. The day it turns on, your team's tools look exactly like they did the day before.
How is this different from the legal tech I already get pitched every week? +
Three things. First, who starts the task: chatbots wait for a prompt and tools wait for an upload, while Execute detects what each case needs and starts the work itself, around the clock, on every active case. Second, nothing to learn: no prompting, no new system, no training. Third, no migration: Execute works with the software your firm already has, so your cases stay where they are. Your job becomes review and approval.
Is this replacing my paralegals? +
No. It takes the work that burns them out: the chasing, the data entry, the fortieth reminder fax. Paralegals become reviewers of finished work. Attorneys get drafts instead of blank pages. The firm stops losing good people to the grind. Execute is the extra hire you could never staff: nights, weekends, every case at once. More on the model: what is an AI paralegal?
What does my team do once Execute is running? +
They review and approve. Your paralegals stop grinding through repetitive production and become reviewers of finished work, which is a promotion in everything but title. Your attorneys spend their hours on strategy, depositions, and trial. The judgment stays human. The typing stops.
Can documents leave the firm without attorney review? +
No. Every document passes through attorney approval before it is served, filed, or sent anywhere. The approval gate is the architecture of the product, not a setting. This is also how the rules of professional conduct want it, and we built for that on purpose.
Does my firm's data train other firms' systems? +
No. The way your firm screens, drafts, and argues is your competitive edge. What Execute learns inside your firm is used for your firm and never pooled, shared, or used to improve a competitor's results. The full security approach is on the Security page.
What practice areas does Execute support? +
Civil litigation, plaintiff and defense. Personal injury practices onboard first because Execute was built inside one, so those workflows are deepest today. Early access expands by practice area, and any litigation firm is welcome on the waitlist now.
What does Execute cost? +
Pricing is announced at launch, with one design target: the full bundle below one paralegal salary. It works every active case at once, never calls in sick, and the products are purchasable separately, so a firm can start with exactly the pain it wants to kill.
Can my firm buy just one product? +
Yes. Intake, Prelitigation, Litigation, and Motion Practice are separately purchasable, and Prelitigation includes requesting, chasing, and filing medical records for the life of the case. Some firms start with one, see the queue drain, and add the next. Each product feeds the next, and any combination works together.
Is this allowed under the rules of professional conduct? +
Execute is built so the attorney remains exactly where the rules require: responsible, supervising, and signing. The system produces drafts and runs process. A licensed attorney reviews and approves everything that matters. It was designed by a practicing trial lawyer for other lawyers, and that is a stronger compliance statement than any marketing page. The full analysis: is AI allowed under the rules of professional conduct?
Is there an AI that drafts discovery responses? +
Yes. Execute Litigation reviews Bills of Particulars, interrogatories, and notices for discovery and inspection the moment they arrive, and drafts the responses from the case file, the records already gathered, and your firm's prior work, with objections where your practice would object. The draft waits for attorney approval days before the deadline instead of hours.
What does legal automation cost? +
It varies widely across the market. Execute's pricing is announced at launch, with one design target: the full bundle below one paralegal salary, working every active case at once. The four products are purchasable separately, so a firm can start with the single workflow that hurts most.
When does Execute launch? +
Execute is in beta testing inside a working law firm now. A small number of pilot firms onboard in fall 2026, drawn from the waitlist by practice area. Joining the waitlist now sets your place in line and gets you first access to each product as it ships.
The Longer Answers
Some questions deserve more than a paragraph.
Written by the founder, answer first, with the sources cited.
What is an autonomous law firm?
The category, defined: the system starts the work, you approve it
What is an AI paralegal?
The digital paralegal and the supervision model
How do law firms automate medical records requests?
The records cycle that runs without a person in the middle
How does AI legal intake work?
From the call ending to a signed retainer, at any hour
Is AI allowed under the rules of professional conduct?
The supervision answer, with the ABA sources
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