Channels
- Practice Area
- Administrative Law
- Admiralty & Maritime Law
- Advertising Law
- Alternative Dispute Resolution
- AmLaw 200 Blogs
- Antitrust Law
- Civil Rights & Privacy Law
- Consumer Law
- Corporate & Commercial Litigation
- Criminal Law
- Divorce & Family Law
- Education Law
- Election Law & Political Commentary
- Electronic Discovery
- Employment & Labor Law
- Environmental Law
- General Counsel Blogs
- Immigration Law
- Insurance Law
- Intellectual Property Law
- International Law
- Judiciary Law
- Media, Entertainment & Sports Law
- Law Firm Management & Legal Marketing
- Personal Injury & Medical Law
- Probate & Estate Planning
- Real Estate & Construction Law
- Tax & Financial Law
- Technology
- Whistleblower Law
- Law School
doug cornelius
ILTA online discussion : What a difference two years makes
The ILTA (International Legal Technology Association) annual conference this week in Dallas is generating a lot of blog and Twitter discussion. What a difference a couple years makes. Here's an excerpt from my August 25, 2006 post on the ILTA 2006 conference. In what may be the latest sign legal...
Blog versus email as a communication tool
I get deluged with emails sent to me for my information, but that require no response. So I couldn't help but notice what Scott Niesen, Director of Marketing at Attensa, had to say in a presentation at Enterprise 2.0, about drawing a distinction between 'what you need to know' and 'what you need...
Blogging as a personal knowledge management tool : More reason for lawyers to blog
Boston knowledge management attorney, Doug Cornelius, offers one more reason for lawyers to blog. Use a blog as a personal knowledge management tool. Reporting on his panel presentation with leading business bloggers at last week's Enterprise 2.0: One common theme among the panel was blogging as...
ROI for lawyer social networking is 'astronomic'
That's the word from Doug Cornelius, a senior real estate associate with Goodwin Procter in Boston and well known knowledge management blogger, in a recent article by The American Lawyer's Brian Baxter. Social networking costs are minimal -- it's not like sponsoring a table at an awards dinner or...
