Will Lawyers Share?
July 18th, 2010 by David GoldWill lawyers really reveal what they know about the law if they can’t send somebody a bill for it—possibly for every tenth of an hour of it? It’s a fair question that reasonably occurs to some people when they hear about Spindle Law. When you look more closely, though, you realize that, in a project full of experiments, this is one place where we aren’t breaking new ground.
Lawyers have a long and varied tradition of sharing analysis of the law in public ways for reasons other than a paycheck. A fairly new instance is the proliferation of law blogs we write for—our own blogs, other people’s blogs, blogs run by law firms, by private companies, by non-profits, you name it. Older examples include writing for print bar publications, teaching and making presentations for legal associations, and many others.
Why do lawyers give away their expert knowledge? Because they get more out of it that way, professionally and personally, than they would by reserving every insight for paying customers. Demonstrating expertise helps lawyers generate business through referrals and makes them more attractive to potential employers, for example. Many also find it intellectually satisfying or enjoy the interaction with those learning from them.
At Spindle Law we’re hard at work to create an environment that rewards contributors richly in many ways. It’s a brand new kind of environment, but if we get it right, lawyers will contribute for all the same old reasons they always have.

July 19th, 2010 at 7:08 am
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Nicholas Diamand, UCLA Law Library and Vicki Steiner, spindlelaw. spindlelaw said: Will Lawyers Share? http://bit.ly/d3lOqq [...]