Create Free User Account for RFPs    Sign in    Claim Organization Profile
GLL Chatbot
Blog
Schematic
Create Personal Profile Claim Profile Requests for Proposals (RFP)
Create RFP Want Referrals?
Global Legal Leaders.com
  • Law Firms
    Alphabetical Revenue # Offices Largest Countries States Endorsements
    The 200 largest firms in the world have 110,000 attorneys who annually provide $130 billion of legal services. Global Legal Leaders begins with the largest and leading firms in 30 countries and 18 US states.
    Leaders Dentons Baker McKenzie Clifford Chance Hogan Lovells DLA Piper White & Case LLP
  • Networks
    Alphabetical Law Accounting Endorsements
    Networks are the largest practice organizations in the world. Law members provide $120 billion of legal services and accounting network members $60 billion of accounting services. Law network members have spent $3 billion creating relationships over 25 years.
    Leaders GGI Global Alliance Lex Mundi World Services Group Meritas Multilaw Ally Law
  • Consultants
    Alphabetical
    The 200 consultants have unique skill sets that firms, and corporate legal department require. Many consultants have been honored by admission to the College of Law Practice Management.
    Leaders Joe Altonji Kevin Clem Jonathan Middleburgh Lucy Bassli Gerry Riskin Norman Clark
  • ALSPs
    Alphabetical Endorsements
    Alternative Legal Services Providers deliver their clients a range of law-related services. Their expertise and resources supplements the knowledge found in firms or corporate legal departments. They are a cost effective way for clients to receive assistance.
    Leaders Axiom Consilio Cybint Deloitte DWF Group Elevate
  • Legal Media
    Alphabetical Endorsements
    In a fragmented market the legal media and publications are the principal sources of information that unite the profession. They represent the heart and soul of the professions.
    Leaders Nicole Black Catrin Griffiths Roy Strom Brian Baxter Robert Ambrogi Joe Patrice
  • GLL Projects
  • AI Tools
  • Private Equity

Create a Free User Account


GLL - 109 languages


GLL Chatbot
AI ‐ The entire global
profession, practice,
and market.


Leading Resources
Software
Law
Legal
Law
Tax Accounting


Global Legal Rankings
Chambers.com
Legal 500
IFLR1000
Regional News
The Lawyer (UK)
Law.com (US)
Above the Law (US)
Latin Lawyer
Legal Business (UK)
Global Legal Post(UK)
Law360 (US)
Bloomberg Law (US)
Lawyers Weekly (Australia)
L'expert (Canada)


Kyle Poe
Company: Legora

Organization Description:

Our mission is to empower exceptional lawyers.

We’re building the world’s first truly collaborative AI for legal professionals: a workspace for boundless collaboration between lawyer ingenuity and machine intelligence.

We're serving 250+ clients across the globe and are backed by ICONIQ, General Catalyst, Benchmark, Redpoint, Y Combinator, and other top investors.

Biography:

Kyle Poe, VP of Legal Innovation & Strategy at Legora, has defined his career by leveraging technology to innovate both the practice and business of law. As Legora’s newest U.S. leader, Kyle reflects on the path that took him from a BigLaw partner managing mass tort cases to driving AI as the catalyst for the next reordering of the legal industry.

Innovating from within

When Kyle Poe first started out as a junior associate, he had an experience that’s familiar to many young lawyers today: “I graduated from law school, arrived at a major firm, and realized just how antiquated legal practice is,” he says. The technology wasn’t keeping up. Processes were fragmented, inefficient, and slow.

Kyle began his career in the mass tort and product liability practice at Morgan Lewis, which managed a national docket of 15,000 cases. Case information was scattered across different systems, spreadsheets, and paper files. The result was inefficiency, slow client reporting, and barriers to scaling the practice.

Instead of waiting for change, Kyle partnered with the firm’s IT team and designed a centralized platform to consolidate case data and documents in one place. More importantly, he saw beyond immediate pain points to the strategic possibilities unlocked by a unified data system, such as using resolution data to guide litigation strategy, or predicting costs to enable intelligent pricing on alternative fee bases.

After successfully innovating his own practice, Kyle went on to build and lead a cross-disciplinary team, deploying the platform across nine practice areas, including employment disputes, medical device liability, vehicle warranty claims, and foreclosure litigation.

When Kyle joined the mass tort group, the docket was 15,000 cases. By the time he left, the practice was successfully managing over 65,000 cases, a scale that would have been impossible without the new system.

By enabling lawyers to analyze outcomes, model costs, and craft creative fee structures, the platform became a firmwide differentiator. It showed that technology wasn’t just about efficiency, it was about reimagining the business model of law.

The turning point

Despite his reputation as an innovator, Kyle resisted moving into legal tech full-time. “The technology itself wasn’t cool,” he says. “What was cool was how it could be applied to practice problems.”

That all changed in late 2022 with the launch of ChatGPT and the mainstream emergence of generative AI. Unlike legacy legal tech, which had narrow applications, Large Language Models (LLMs) promised flexibility across a wide range of legal tasks.

To test the potential, Kyle designed a proof of concept on an active matter, using AI to analyze thousands of plaintiff fact sheets in a major litigation. What typically took human teams a month was completed by AI in three days, with better quality results.

“That was the moment,” Kyle recalls, “that I realized AI wasn’t just incremental. It was transformational. It was clear to me that this was going to re-wire the legal profession. Despite the rise of e-discovery, electronic research, email, even smartphones, the core workflows of law have barely changed in 100 years. Generative AI is the first force with the potential to truly disrupt that.”

He adds, “With LLMs, computers have finally learned how to manipulate natural language. Virtually everything that lawyers do is rooted in review or drafting in natural language.”

Why Legora?

Kyle’s first encounter with Legora came when he saw a demo of its now-signature feature, Tabular Review. “Lawyers often work at scale and need to do so consistently. The creation of Tabular Review allows lawyers to pose structured questions across hundreds or thousands of documents and get consistent, reliable outputs.”

It was clear Legora understood that lawyers need different ways of engaging with AI depending on the task. “This was proof that Legora was building solutions grounded in the real workflows of legal practice,” Kyle recalls. Conversations with CEO Max Junestrand soon followed where Max convinced Kyle that Legora was the right place to make an impact.

As tech platforms in legal AI have taken shape, Legora is aiming high, with an ambition to be in the hands of every elite lawyer across the globe – an aspiration Kyle shares wholeheartedly. “Max’s vision matches my own eagerness and excitement to help make that happen. And it’s an ambition at Legora that’s backed up by talent and product quality, with a proven track record of delivering.”

At Legora, Kyle’s role centers on two priorities: helping firms use AI to innovate both the practice and business of law; and guiding the evolution of the platform itself.

In keeping with Legora’s partnership approach, Kyle is working closely with firms not just to adopt Legora, but to adapt their practices. “Emerging AI capabilities mean firms need to rethink how they deliver legal services to clients, and how they design more data-driven, creative pricing and build new business models,” he says.

Generational reordering

Perhaps the most compelling theme in Kyle’s vision is that AI represents a generational reordering event for the legal industry. “Most of the time the overall hierarchy of firms remains relatively stable from year to year,” he explains. “But history shows that short windows of opportunity appear when the market is ripe for large-scale reshuffling. The last major reordering was in the 1980s, when hostile takeovers and the poison pill created a new field of work, propelling select firms to new prominence. AI is the next such catalyst,” Kyle argues.

“The real winners won’t be the first to buy access to a platform and hand out logins,” he warns, “success will come from rethinking workflows, how matters are staffed, how knowledge is shared, how pricing is structured, and how training is done. AI has to be operationalized, not just licensed.”

“For top firms, it’s a defensive move: adopt with urgency or risk losing ground. For challengers, it’s a chance to leapfrog. Once the window closes, rankings will settle back into place. But right now, firms have a once-in-a-generation moment to get ahead.”

Kyle Poe

Title: VP Legal Innovation

Address:
City: Houston
Country: United States of America

Email: jameskylepoe@gmail.com
Website: https://legora.com/

Telephone:

Receive Requests for Proposals: Minimum Referral Value:
Practice Areas:

Languages:

Awards and Rankings:




Claim / Update / Enhance
Legal and Accounting Markets
 

Request for Proposals
(1) Select a Country or State - (2) Click on for form - (3) Complete/Submit Form - (4) Receive Responses - (5) Compare Proposals

Want Business Referrals? Free

Networks' Member Firms



Alternative Legal Service Providers

0079
 
Deloitte - Mark Ross
Want Referrals - Yes
0049
 
Elevate - Liam Brown
Want Referrals - Yes
0046
 
PWC Legal - Tony O'Malley
Want Referrals - Undecided
0043
 
EY Law - Cornelius Grossman
Want Referrals - Undecided
0031
 
Epiq - David Dobson
Want Referrals - Undecided
0026
 
KPMG Legal - Nick Roome
Want Referrals - Undecided
0024
 
UnitedLex - Daniel Reed
Want Referrals - Yes
0020
 
Integreon - Rohan Rai
Want Referrals - Undecided
0017
 
Axiom - David McVeigh
Want Referrals - Yes
0016
 
Factor - Edward Sohn
Want Referrals - Undecided
0013
 
EY Managed Services - Seth McNary
Want Referrals - Undecided
0010
 
Consilio - Andy MacDonald
Want Referrals - Undecided
0008
 
DWF Group - Nigel Knowles
Want Referrals - Undecided
0008
 
KLDiscovery - Chris Weiler
Want Referrals - Undecided
0008
 
Lawyers On Demand - Tom Harley
Want Referrals - Undecided
0008
 
Mindcrest - Ganesh Natarajan
Want Referrals - Undecided
0008
 
QuisLex - Ram Vasudevan
Want Referrals - Undecided
0007
 
Cybint - Roy Zur
Want Referrals - Undecided

Mission

The mission of Global Legal Leaders is to provide real-time access to the expertise of lawyers , accountants, consultants and ALSPs in 10,000 firms in 160 countries - for free


© Copyright 2025 All rights reserved
  • HOME
  • WORLD'S LARGEST FIRMS
  • NETWORKS
  • CONSULTANTS
  • ALSPs
  • TEAM
  • FAQ - FIRMS
  • FAQ - USERS
  • LEGAL & PRIVACY
CONTACT US