
Weightmans
Q&A:
Interview with Sarah Walton: ‘Leaders must accept that change isn’t always comfortable’
Leaders outline how law firms can deliver successful transformation projects and disciplined change management.
Does AI have potential to train the next generation of lawyers?
Freeths' Nick Pryor and Susan Whitla highlight the keys to measuring project value holistically

Q&A:
Interview with Sarah Walton: ‘Leaders must accept that change isn’t always comfortable’

Speak up:
Why B Corp certification is more than a badge

Speak up:
Mazur appeal: a win on delegation, a warning on supervision

Partner comment:
A different lens is needed to see genAI’s value

The big idea:
Destination: Law firm of the future

Event report:
Views from the top

Event report:
Views from the top

Event report:
Views from the top

Event report:
Views from the top

Event report:
Views from the top

Deep dive:
Capturing success through a wider lens

Deep dive:
Capturing success through a wider lens

Brain training:
Learning without ladders

Industry views:
Transformation wins

Industry views:
A portal to a new world of collaboration

Industry case study:
Interaction brings TLT’s workplace vision to life

Industry interview:
The parallel advantage

Industry analysis:
Solid data foundations, durable results

Industry analysis:
The leadership question: how do we make AI stick?
Welcome to Briefing May!
For an industry that is often described by many as being ‘reluctant to change’, we’ve certainly seen a lot of innovation and transformation in the legal sector, particularly over the past 18 months. Firms have been revamping their core systems and internal processes, genAI has quickly moved from pilots to mainstream operational use — with some firms unveiling new use cases, like client-facing chatbots and behavioural science AI tools for knowledge management (many of which Briefing has highlighted in previous editions) — and more lawyers are now embracing the vibe-coding trend.
As several transformation leaders emphasise in this issue’s cover story, change is inevitable, and how you tackle it can make or break your business. For transformation plans to take off (and land), the right blend of flexibility, agility and strategic planning is essential, as is having a solid change management framework in place — and these experts share the elements needed to land transformation safely for long-term results.
This edition brings you a mix of carefully curated features, exclusive interviews and new content types packed with practical insights on how to fuel transformation that takes flight and sticks the landing, despite market turbulence.
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The hardest part of any firmwide transformation isn’t buying tools, it’s landing change. Transformation leaders from CMS, Eversheds Sutherland, Irwin Mitchell, Trowers & Hamlins and White & Case highlight to Briefing editor Andreea Dulgheru why disciplined change management — underpinned by early and steady communication, empathetic leadership, and complete focus from start to finish — is the solid bridge to shaping the law firm of the future
For years, law firm leaders have been wary of AI’s impact on training the new generations of lawyers in core legal skills honed over time — but could it also be part of the solution? Leaders at one recent Briefing roundtable discussed, and editor Andreea Dulgheru reports
Aileen Johnson, director of knowledge at Charles Russell Speechlys, explores how AI is quietly reshaping the way lawyers learn and outlines why knowledge teams hold the key to ensuring the profession grows sharper, not shallower, as a result