In today’s volatile political climate, many lawyers are finding themselves forced to start a firm on the fly — either due to a clash of values with Biglaw or termination from government service or possibly even displacement by AI. Regardless of the reason, these suddenly solos don’t have the luxury of months of planning to get a law firm up and running.
But the good news is that starting a firm on the fly doesn’t mean it has to look fly-by-night. In addition to a computer and Internet access, here are six indispensable technology tools, that cost $20/month or less, that can help you start a sleek and streamlined practice in a weekend.
1. Self-Scheduling Tools: End the Email Tennis Match Forever
Starting out, there’s nothing more mission-critical than getting the word out to as many contacts as possible. And while a bulk email announcement is a good start, one-on-one Zoom calls or in-person coffee dates are more likely to result in real conversation and yield real business.
Yet nothing screams “amateur hour” quite like the coordination email dance: “How about Tuesday at 2?” “Tuesday doesn’t work, what about Wednesday at 3?” “Wednesday I’m in court, maybe Thursday morning?” That’s why you should invest in a calendaring tool like Calendly.com (free – $16/month) or AcuityScheduling.com ($16 – $49/month). These products let you set your availability and link your calendar everywhere (e.g., email signature, LinkedIn profile, website footer) so contacts book themselves without a single coordination email. And as an added bonus, you look like you have your act together. Down the line, when you’re ready, you can even use these tools for paid consultations with prospective clients. (Here’s a video on how to set up Calendly for free and paid consults.)
2. Payment Processing: Make It Stupid-Easy for Clients to Pay
Without a mechanism for accepting payment, your new firm is nothing more than a hobby or a charity (and even charities have GoFundMe sites). And the ability to accept paper checks won’t cut it in an age where the vast majority of clients pay bills online. Practice management platforms like Clio or MyCase offer integrated payment processors — but if you’re too overwhelmed to figure out which one to pick, you can opt for LawPay.com as a stand-alone product but Freshbooks, Stripe, Zelle, or even Venmo in a pinch will get the job done. As for processing fees, some jurisdictions allow you to pass these costs on to clients but starting out, you’re better off eating the charges as a cost of doing business.
3. Online Presence: Stop Hiding Behind “Professional Tradition”
These days, an online presence — more so than a brick and mortar office — confirms that you’re real. But you don’t need a $10,000 website as proof. Starting out, any social media site, whether on LinkedIn, Instagram, or even TikTok will suffice if you can stock it with some useful content. If your target clients favor something more traditional, you can throw up a one-page website for free using Carrd.co. The site is easy to use but if you can’t get the results you want, you can enlist a contractor from Fiverr.co to design a site with Carrd for under $20.
4. Communications Tools: Call Me, Maybe
Out of the gate, you’ll need a way to communicate with clients. But in today’s world, communicatons aren’t limited to the phone. You can opt for VOIP (Voice Over IP) platforms like Dialpad or RingCentral, combined voice and video like Zoom or GoogleMeet, CaseStatus.com for texting, and of course, good old-fashioned email. So long as your engagement agreement makes clear to clients how you’ll communicate with them, there’s no need to make yourself available by phone 24-7.
5. E-Signature Capability: Kill the Print-Sign-Scan Cycle Forever
Nothing kills momentum like administrative friction. Your client is ready to hire you, excited about moving forward, and then you email them a PDF with instructions to “print, sign, scan, and return.” Half won’t have access to a printer. The other half will let the document sit on their desk for a week while they figure out how to scan it back. That’s why an e-signature platform is imperative. You can start with the e-signature functions baked into tools you already use like Google workspace, Microsoft 365, Adobe, or a law practice management platform.
6. AI Platform: Your Cyber Workhorse
Perhaps the most indispensable tool for starting a law firm on the fly is one that wasn’t available even three short years ago: generative AI. A paid version of a general-purpose AI platform — ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Perplexity, or NotebookLM — can serve as your cyber-paralegal, marketing assistant, design intern, and business coach rolled into one. With AI at your fingertips, you can:
● Generate marketing content (LinkedIn posts, press releases, client alerts) in minutes.
● Draft contracts, engagement agreements, and intake forms customized to your practice.
● Create placeholder logos, slogans, or website copy so you look polished from day one.
● Troubleshoot tech problems, brainstorm strategy, and even role-play client interactions.
● Summarize cases, statutes, or regulatory filings while you handle client outreach.
Think of AI not as a gimmick but as your first hire — your proverbial chef-cook-bottlewasher that works 24/7 that never sleeps, never bills overtime, and never complains about working weekends.
Starting a law firm on the fly is never ideal. But with today’s tech tools, you can launch a firm that looks fly right out of the gate and is well positioned to soar.

Carolyn Elefant is one of the country’s most recognized advocates for solo and small firm lawyers. She founded MyShingle.com in 2002, the longest-running blog for solo practitioners, where she has published thousands of articles, resources, and guides on starting, running, and growing independent law practices. She is the author of Solo by Choice, widely regarded as the definitive handbook for launching and sustaining a law practice, and has spoken at countless bar events and legal conferences on technology, innovation, and regulatory reform that impacts solos and smalls. Elefant also develops practical tools like the AI Teach-In to help small firms adopt AI and she consistently champions reforms to level the playing field for independent lawyers. Alongside this work, she runs the Law Offices of Carolyn Elefant, a national energy and regulatory practice that handles selective complex, high-stakes matters.
The post From Fly-By-Night To Looking Fly: Starting A Law Firm On The Fly In 2025 appeared first on Above the Law.
In today’s volatile political climate, many lawyers are finding themselves forced to start a firm on the fly — either due to a clash of values with Biglaw or termination from government service or possibly even displacement by AI. Regardless of the reason, these suddenly solos don’t have the luxury of months of planning to get a law firm up and running.
But the good news is that starting a firm on the fly doesn’t mean it has to look fly-by-night. In addition to a computer and Internet access, here are six indispensable technology tools, that cost $20/month or less, that can help you start a sleek and streamlined practice in a weekend.
1. Self-Scheduling Tools: End the Email Tennis Match Forever
Starting out, there’s nothing more mission-critical than getting the word out to as many contacts as possible. And while a bulk email announcement is a good start, one-on-one Zoom calls or in-person coffee dates are more likely to result in real conversation and yield real business.
Yet nothing screams “amateur hour” quite like the coordination email dance: “How about Tuesday at 2?” “Tuesday doesn’t work, what about Wednesday at 3?” “Wednesday I’m in court, maybe Thursday morning?” That’s why you should invest in a calendaring tool like Calendly.com (free – $16/month) or AcuityScheduling.com ($16 – $49/month). These products let you set your availability and link your calendar everywhere (e.g., email signature, LinkedIn profile, website footer) so contacts book themselves without a single coordination email. And as an added bonus, you look like you have your act together. Down the line, when you’re ready, you can even use these tools for paid consultations with prospective clients. (Here’s a video on how to set up Calendly for free and paid consults.)
2. Payment Processing: Make It Stupid-Easy for Clients to Pay
Without a mechanism for accepting payment, your new firm is nothing more than a hobby or a charity (and even charities have GoFundMe sites). And the ability to accept paper checks won’t cut it in an age where the vast majority of clients pay bills online. Practice management platforms like Clio or MyCase offer integrated payment processors — but if you’re too overwhelmed to figure out which one to pick, you can opt for LawPay.com as a stand-alone product but Freshbooks, Stripe, Zelle, or even Venmo in a pinch will get the job done. As for processing fees, some jurisdictions allow you to pass these costs on to clients but starting out, you’re better off eating the charges as a cost of doing business.
3. Online Presence: Stop Hiding Behind “Professional Tradition”
These days, an online presence — more so than a brick and mortar office — confirms that you’re real. But you don’t need a $10,000 website as proof. Starting out, any social media site, whether on LinkedIn, Instagram, or even TikTok will suffice if you can stock it with some useful content. If your target clients favor something more traditional, you can throw up a one-page website for free using Carrd.co. The site is easy to use but if you can’t get the results you want, you can enlist a contractor from Fiverr.co to design a site with Carrd for under $20.
4. Communications Tools: Call Me, Maybe
Out of the gate, you’ll need a way to communicate with clients. But in today’s world, communicatons aren’t limited to the phone. You can opt for VOIP (Voice Over IP) platforms like Dialpad or RingCentral, combined voice and video like Zoom or GoogleMeet, CaseStatus.com for texting, and of course, good old-fashioned email. So long as your engagement agreement makes clear to clients how you’ll communicate with them, there’s no need to make yourself available by phone 24-7.
5. E-Signature Capability: Kill the Print-Sign-Scan Cycle Forever
Nothing kills momentum like administrative friction. Your client is ready to hire you, excited about moving forward, and then you email them a PDF with instructions to “print, sign, scan, and return.” Half won’t have access to a printer. The other half will let the document sit on their desk for a week while they figure out how to scan it back. That’s why an e-signature platform is imperative. You can start with the e-signature functions baked into tools you already use like Google workspace, Microsoft 365, Adobe, or a law practice management platform.
6. AI Platform: Your Cyber Workhorse
Perhaps the most indispensable tool for starting a law firm on the fly is one that wasn’t available even three short years ago: generative AI. A paid version of a general-purpose AI platform — ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Perplexity, or NotebookLM — can serve as your cyber-paralegal, marketing assistant, design intern, and business coach rolled into one. With AI at your fingertips, you can:
● Generate marketing content (LinkedIn posts, press releases, client alerts) in minutes.
● Draft contracts, engagement agreements, and intake forms customized to your practice.
● Create placeholder logos, slogans, or website copy so you look polished from day one.
● Troubleshoot tech problems, brainstorm strategy, and even role-play client interactions.
● Summarize cases, statutes, or regulatory filings while you handle client outreach.
Think of AI not as a gimmick but as your first hire — your proverbial chef-cook-bottlewasher that works 24/7 that never sleeps, never bills overtime, and never complains about working weekends.
Starting a law firm on the fly is never ideal. But with today’s tech tools, you can launch a firm that looks fly right out of the gate and is well positioned to soar.

Carolyn Elefant is one of the country’s most recognized advocates for solo and small firm lawyers. She founded MyShingle.com in 2002, the longest-running blog for solo practitioners, where she has published thousands of articles, resources, and guides on starting, running, and growing independent law practices. She is the author of Solo by Choice, widely regarded as the definitive handbook for launching and sustaining a law practice, and has spoken at countless bar events and legal conferences on technology, innovation, and regulatory reform that impacts solos and smalls. Elefant also develops practical tools like the AI Teach-In to help small firms adopt AI and she consistently champions reforms to level the playing field for independent lawyers. Alongside this work, she runs the Law Offices of Carolyn Elefant, a national energy and regulatory practice that handles selective complex, high-stakes matters.
The post From Fly-By-Night To Looking Fly: Starting A Law Firm On The Fly In 2025 appeared first on Above the Law.