Activate: How to Streamline Law Firm Billing

Effective billing, like learning any skill, requires repetition. 

 

If you can use the same process for billing every time, it makes it much easier to repeat that process, including for collection purposes. 

 

But, as with many things that require repetition in business, the use of templates can help tremendously, in streamlining your law firm processes. 



So, the first question is whether you use ‘activity codes’ for billingIf you do, it’s easier to generate items on an invoice, tied to the specific activities you perform for clients regularlyThere are activity codes/billing codes for law firms available online (‘LEDES billing’ is a common set of activity codes for law firms to employ), and some softwares include default activity codes for billing – but, you can also generate and maintain your own activity codes, if you wish.  All you need to do is create a shorthand for the task, and maybe employ a number, to make it look official, ya know. 

 

That’s step one; but, step two is where the magic startsIf you can attach templated billing descriptions to your activity codes, then you’re in businessThat way, every time you select a billing code, you will also produce a billing description, which can be the final version of that billing description, or which can serve as a foundation (draft) of a final version. 

 

Billing can be a repeatable motion, even though most law firms don’t treat it that way. 

 

. . . 

 

If you’re ready to streamline your law firm billing, give us a buzz. 

Through a unique partnership between the Maine Board of Overseers of the Bar and Jared Correia’s Red Cave Law Firm Consulting, Maine attorneys have access to experienced law practice management consultants at a special discounted rate. 

To get started, visit Red Cave’s landing page for Maine attorneys, and start running your law practice like a business.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Buried Treasure: What Software Features Are You Missing?

The Nice and Naughty List: How to Pick New Software

Thinking Outside the Inbox: Email Tips