Hi there,
I had just spent an amazing 36 hours in Bergen, Norway, with my son George, and took a taxi to the airport instead of an Uber.
On my way, the fare meter climbed at what felt like breakneck speed 630, 640, 650 kroner… 690, 700, 710 (still no airport in site)... 770, 780, 790 ($75 USD)... oh dear Lord, when was this going to end? Make it stop!
Funny thing about that ride: The taxi driver and I hadn’t agreed on the price at the beginning. With presumably thousands of airport trips under its belt, the taxi company knew the cost and could have given me an upfront quote, saving me unnecessary levels of anxiety.
So, where am I going with this? Taxis and legal pricing are more similar than you think.
In-house legal teams have felt their own anxiety, watching their legal bills climb unpredictably, month after month. Just like my agita-inducing taxi ride, clients have endured uncertainty, wondering when and how the mounting billable hours on their matter would finally stop ticking upward.
When Uber, Lyft, and other ridesharing companies disrupted the taxi industry, it wasn't just about the convenience or the app-based technology — it was fundamentally about pricing certainty.
Ridesharing gave riders confidence, knowing precisely how much their ride would cost upfront. No surprises. No skyrocketing meters.
This clarity changed consumer expectations permanently, and as a result, traditional taxis quickly found themselves at a significant disadvantage.
The legal industry is undergoing a similar disruption.
For decades, hourly billing has been the norm, a model deeply embedded in law firm operations and client relationships. Like traditional taxis, the legal industry has been slow to adopt fixed and value-based pricing, despite doing similar work repeatedly and predictably.
Every litigation, every merger, every transaction – most legal workflows have been done thousands of times before (of course, there are some unique aspects). The data exists. Law firms have it. Clients have it.
Yet many firms have resisted offering price certainty, relying instead on the comfort of hourly billing and ever-increasing hourly rates.
But things are rapidly changing!