Sabastian Niles is the President and Chief Legal Officer of Salesforce. This post is based on his Salesforce open letter.
Law is a noble profession, and it’s a business. Today, AI is no longer a future capability — it’s the enabler and catalyst for a fundamental shift in how law and professional services firms create value, drive top-line growth, manage risks, and earn client trust. Best-in-class legal advisory and execution has always lived at the intersection of professional duty and commercial realities. As we enter this new era, the immense value firms will unlock through agentic transformation should translate into better outcomes, deeper insights, and superior service for clients, resulting in growth for the firm. The gains must also of course be shared with clients through savings, cost-efficiencies, and new business models; with associates and partners through expanded fluency, capacity, and development; and with communities through expanded pro bono impact, strengthening the profession’s public standing.
We must be candid: Companies have become more sophisticated in how they purchase — and evaluate — legal services than ever before. While many law firms continue to rely on traditional models, we’re watching Clayton Christensen’s “The Innovator’s Dilemma” play out in real-time within the legal sector, just as it is for the broader professional service firm industry. Firms that embrace transformation are responding to this new era with digital sophistication, competing on outcomes and setting a new global standard. Meanwhile, professional service advisory firms worldwide have set their sights on legal services as ripe for reimagination. The era of the AI pilot is over. Heightened effectiveness and efficiency gains from AI, shared with clients, are no longer optional nice-to-haves; they’re prerequisites for staying competitive and seizing revenue opportunities. The gap is widening, and the time to bridge it is now.
