messaging-allowed-claims-lawyer

Category: Coding Risk: Medium risk ★ 3.9 · Rating 3.9/5 (8) sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal MIT

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network_accessautomation_control

name: messaging-allowed-claims-lawyer
description: Use when drafting or reviewing B2B copy, sales decks, LinkedIn content, conference materials, or partnership proposals directed at lawyers, in-house counsel, or law firm decision-makers. Defines the permitted productivity, quality, and workflow claims for a legal AI assistant targeting professional legal practitioners. Pair with messaging-banned-claims-lawyer to understand the full boundary.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: messaging.allowed-claims-lawyer
category: messaging
priority: P0
intent: [messaging, B2B, lawyer, marketing, claims, productivity, law-firm]
related: [messaging-banned-claims-lawyer, messaging-bridge-line, messaging-allowed-claims-consumer, messaging-compliance-checker, messaging-outcome-claims-allowed]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"

Messaging — Allowed Lawyer Claims

When this applies

This skill governs all copy directed at licensed legal professionals and law firm decision-makers: practicing solicitors, advocates, barristers, in-house counsel, legal operations managers, managing partners, and firm administrators who are evaluating or using a legal AI assistant in their professional practice. It applies to:

  • Sales decks and pitch materials
  • LinkedIn organic and sponsored content
  • Conference and legal tech expo presentations
  • Bar association and CLE program partnerships
  • Direct outreach emails and sequences
  • Product landing pages for professional tiers
  • Case study and white-paper content
  • Word-of-mouth referral materials shared between lawyers

If the surface has a mixed audience (lawyers and non-lawyers), default to the more conservative consumer rules for shared claims, and add a lawyer-specific section only if audience segmentation is confirmed.


Behavior — The Permitted Frame

Lawyers are highly skeptical of technology claims. The permitted frame is professional tool — augmentation of expert capacity, not replacement, disruption, or democratization of legal practice. Every claim must respect:

  1. The lawyer's expertise and professional judgment as primary
  2. The AI as a force multiplier for that judgment
  3. Concrete, defensible productivity metrics (when cited, cite the source)
  4. Compliance with bar advertising rules (no results guarantees, no comparative performance claims without substantiation)

Allowed Framing (Verbatim and Paraphrased)

Claim type Allowed formulation
Productivity "10x productivity on routine drafting" (substantiate with user data)
Collaboration "Built with lawyers, for lawyers"
Platform "Mobile + desktop workbench — works wherever you do"
Time saving "Save hours on contract review" (average; cite if specific number)
First drafts "Generate first drafts in minutes"
Research "Find precedents and statutory references in seconds"
Jurisdictions "Multi-jurisdictional coverage — LB, UAE, KSA, DIFC, ADGM, UK, EU, US"
Integration "Compatible with your existing workflow (Word, email, document management)"
Accessibility "Available wherever you are — mobile, desktop, Word plug-in"
Customisation "Per-firm customisation: firm playbooks, templates, matter-specific configurations"
Consistency "Consistent quality across every associate, every matter"
Client service "Faster turnaround — better client communication"

All framing that quantifies time or productivity must be tied to documented internal data or customer survey results and disclaimed as averages.


Allowed Outcomes for Lawyers

These outcome-level claims are permitted in lawyer-directed marketing when accurately substantiated:

  • Productivity gains: faster drafting, research, and review cycles (cite hours/week or % improvement with source)
  • Quality consistency: the assistant catches issues that slip through rushed human review
  • Speed: research, drafting, and review measurably faster for routine work types
  • Better client communication: faster status updates, clearer explanatory memos
  • Mobile workflow: full legal capability accessible from phone and tablet — field, court, travel
  • Firm differentiation: first-mover advantage in tech-enabled practice positioning

Tone for Lawyer Marketing

Dimension Guidance
Register Professional, competent, peer-to-peer — never talk down
Specificity Lawyers respond to concrete metrics and worked examples, not abstract aspirations
Expertise respect Frame AI as augmenting the lawyer's irreplaceable judgment, not performing it
Bar-rule awareness Do not make claims that would violate the advertising rules of the targeted bar (KSA, Dubai, DIFC, Lebanon Bar Association, SRA, etc.)
No hype Avoid breathless "revolutionary" language; prefer precise capability descriptions
Trust building Reference law firm clients (with permission), bar partnerships, and security certifications

Channel-Specific Rules

LinkedIn

  • Thought leadership preferred: "What I learned reviewing 500 Saudi employment contracts with AI"
  • Case studies and workflow walk-throughs perform well
  • Avoid: "AI will change everything" — too generic and triggers skepticism
  • Tag bar associations and legal tech communities for organic reach

Bar Associations and CLE Programs

  • Position as a practice management tool eligible for CLE credit (in jurisdictions that allow technology-focused CLE)
  • Emphasise security, confidentiality, and professional responsibility alignment
  • Provide whitepapers on ethical use of AI in legal practice to accompany product demos
  • Demo-driven; lead with the workflow, not the technology
  • Show the before/after on a contract review task
  • Measure ROI in hours per matter, not vague efficiency claims

Direct Sales Outreach

  • Personalise by firm size and practice area
  • Enterprise pitch: emphasise eFirm configuration, team management, usage analytics
  • Solo/small firm pitch: emphasise speed-to-first-draft and mobile capability
  • Always reference the specific jurisdictions the firm practices in

Word of Mouth

  • Provide referral materials (one-pager, short demo video) suitable for sharing between lawyers
  • Lawyer-to-lawyer recommendations are highest-trust — invest in making existing users advocates
  • Testimonials: allowed only with documented consent and factual accuracy review

Examples

Allowed:

"Louis generates the first draft of an NDA in under two minutes — our associates use the extra hour for client work."

Allowed:

"Coverage across Lebanon, KSA, UAE, DIFC, and ADGM in one workbench — no more tab-switching between jurisdictions."

Not allowed (see [[messaging-banned-claims-lawyer]]):

"Replace your associates with Louis."

Not allowed:

"Louis does your job better than you."


Edge Cases

Situation Rule
Lawyer testimonial referencing "replacing staff" Do not publish; request a revised quote
ROI calculator showing headcount reduction Reframe as "capacity expansion" not "headcount reduction"
Comparison with a named competitor Factual comparisons allowed; results comparisons require substantiation; seek legal review
Claims about specific legal outcomes Never allowed — see [[messaging-banned-claims-lawyer]]
Claim about passing bar exam Novelty/awareness only; do not frame as replacing bar study or competence

Do not

  • Suggest the product replaces or diminishes the role of lawyers (direct conflict with the lawyer buyer's professional identity)
  • Claim specific case wins, settlement amounts, or outcome percentages
  • Use consumer-style "anyone can do this" framing on lawyer surfaces
  • Imply the product displaces associates, juniors, or paralegal staff
  • Use "cheaper than hiring" framing on B2B materials — lawyers find this threatening to their billing model

  • [[messaging-banned-claims-lawyer]]
  • [[messaging-bridge-line]]
  • [[messaging-allowed-claims-consumer]]
  • [[messaging-compliance-checker]]
  • [[messaging-outcome-claims-allowed]]