Market Report | The State of LegalTech adoption: Is AI & LegalTech truly transforming legal workflows?
LegalTech Advice
Feargus MacDaeid

Why AI should augment lawyers, not replace them

The Evolving AI Debate: Autonomy vs. Augmentation

AI-driven automation is reshaping legal workflows, but not all AI is the same. AI agents are software systems that execute tasks independently. Fully autonomous agents complete legal work end-to-end with little or no human involvement, while semi-autonomous agents automate execution but keep lawyers in control. The real value lies in the latter - where AI handles the toil, and lawyers focus on strategy.

The conversation must move beyond autonomy to augmentation - boosting efficiency while keeping legal expertise at the core. This is where Fordification comes in: AI structures workflows into modular tasks, executing routine steps while lawyers refine and approve the output.

The best legal AI doesn’t replace human cognition - it augments human action, automating tasks like:

  • Contract review – AI surfaces key clauses, flags risks and suggests modifications, but the lawyer makes the final call.
  • Document drafting – AI standardises and accelerates drafting, while lawyers customise content.
  • Legal research – AI scans vast databases for case law, contracts and precedents, cutting down manual research time.

In this model, AI is the orchestrator of execution, but lawyers orchestrate AI - overseeing tasks, ensuring accuracy and providing strategic direction. AI does the heavy lifting; lawyers focus on high-value decision-making.

Lawyers as thinkers, AI as doers

Up until now, lawyers have been both thinkers and doers - conducting research, drafting documents, managing case files and making strategic decisions. But as AI takes over execution tasks, the role of the lawyer is changing. Lawyers are increasingly shifting toward being orchestrators of legal workflows rather than executors of repetitive tasks. This raises the bar for legal professionals, allowing them to:

  • Focus more on high-value advisory, strategic and critical thinking, along with problem-solving.
  • Develop expertise in overseeing AI-generated work, ensuring accuracy and contextual relevance.
  • Adapt to new modes of human-AI interaction, where the ability to guide, interpret and refine AI output is key.

With AI handling execution tasks, lawyers must operate at a higher cognitive level—overseeing AI-generated work, ensuring it aligns with legal strategy, and refining its outputs as needed.

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The missing UX of AI agents

A major oversight in AI development is the lack of focus on how humans interact with AI agents. In many industries, AI is designed as a collaborative tool - think of autopilot in aviation or AI-assisted diagnostics in medicine. In LegalTech, however, many solutions aim for autonomy without considering the lawyer’s role in the process.

For AI to truly augment legal professionals, it must prioritise:

  • Transparency: AI-generated outputs should be explainable and auditable, especially when lawyers need to justify changes to senior colleagues, clients or opposing counsel.
  • Seamless integration: AI should fit within existing legal workflows, not force lawyers to adapt to rigid new systems.
  • Human-in-the-loop decision-making: AI should present options and insights, leaving final decisions to human experts.
  • User experience (UX) and interaction design: Lawyers must be able to intuitively direct, review and modify AI-generated work without unnecessary friction or complexity.

As AI becomes the ‘doer’ in legal workflows, user experience must ensure that lawyers can efficiently interact with AI, review outputs, and provide guidance at key decision points.

What this means for lawyers & LegalTech developers

For lawyers, the shift toward AI augmentation rather than automation means investing in tools that enhance human expertise rather than attempting to replace it. The most effective AI implementations will:

  • Reduce time spent on manual, low-value tasks Improve accuracy and consistency in document-heavy workflows.
  • Enhance accountability and transparency, making it easier to justify legal decisions internally and externally.
  • Ensure that legal professionals remain in control of AI-driven workflows, overseeing and refining automated outputs.

For LegalTech developers, this means rethinking how AI is designed - moving beyond the pursuit of autonomy for its own sake and instead prioritising usability, collaboration and augmentation. AI must integrate seamlessly into the legal professional’s workflow, providing a smooth and intuitive interface for interaction rather than acting as a black box.

A new way forward

The future of legal AI is about enabling lawyers to work smarter, faster and more effectively. By shifting the conversation from autonomy to augmentation, we shift to building solutions that centre on the lawyers and become an integrated partner in legal workflows.

As AI takes on the execution-heavy tasks, lawyers will become orchestrators of AI-driven workflows. This transformation requires a fundamental rethink of AI-human interaction in LegalTech - where UX, transparency and control become just as important as automation itself.

The next generation of legal AI should be built with the lawyer in mind, not as a standalone entity, but as an integrated partner in legal workflows. Rather than diminishing the role of legal professionals, AI’s increasing execution capability elevates their strategic value - enabling them to focus on high-impact decision-making and client advocacy. It’s time to move beyond the myth of AI autonomy in legal practice.

Check out our new report: The State of LegalTech Adoption 2025.

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