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Ragunath Ramanathan on employment

From Raghu Ramanathan, President, Legal Professionals, on BBC Radio Tech Life · · Thomson Reuters

“First of all, if lawyers continue to deliver what they deliver, they need 30 to 40% less lawyers in a few years' time for such output.”

Ragunath Ramanathan
President of the Legal Professionals, Thomson Reuters Corporation
Controversial Policy Impact employmentlegal professionAI impact

On , Ragunath Ramanathan, President of the Legal Professionals at Thomson Reuters Corporation, spoke about employment during Raghu Ramanathan, President, Legal Professionals, on BBC Radio Tech Life on Thomson Reuters.

Raghu Ramanathan, President, Legal Professionals, on BBC Radio Tech Life
Watch on YouTube at 2:40
Raghu Ramanathan, President, Legal Professionals, on BBC Radio Tech Life
Thomson Reuters
Watch on YouTube at 2:40
AI is not replacing lawyers. However, it's significantly enhancing their work. In a new BBC Radio Tech Life interview, Raghu Ramanathan, our President of Legal Professionals, shares how: AI can build legal timelines "78% faster with 60% more details." Westlaw Advantage breaks down complex research, iterates on gray areas, and delivers a comprehensive brief. We're seeing "lawyers with AI in court"—and judges using AI on complex cases. Listen to the clip to hear what this means for the future of legal professionals and why the lawyers who thrive will be "complex thinkers and problem solvers."
Ragunath Ramanathan

About Ragunath Ramanathan

President of the Legal Professionals · Thomson Reuters Corporation

Raghu Ramanathan, President of Legal Professionals at Thomson Reuters, has stated that artificial intelligence is not replacing lawyers but is significantly enhancing their work. In a BBC Radio Tech Life interview, he said AI can build legal timelines "78% faster with 60% more details" and described Thomson Reuters' product, Co-Counsel, as handling tasks such as summarizing documents, creating timelines, and conducting legal research. He noted that "lawyers with AI in court" are already appearing, citing a client who used AI during cross-examination to generate questions that helped win a case, and added that judges are beginning to use AI on complex cases. Ramanathan also said that if lawyers continue delivering the same output, they will need "30 to 40% less lawyers in a few years' time," but predicted that demand for lawyers will remain strong as legal services evolve. In other appearances, Ramanathan discussed the adoption of AI in the legal profession. He said that Thomson Reuters is taking more risks by developing harder AI skills, such as a "claims explorer" tool, and that the company must invest in AI or its solutions will become obsolete. He stated that professional services companies need to shift from "time-based antiquated pricing mechanisms to outcome-based pricing." Ramanathan also noted that Thomson Reuters has an agreement to deploy its AI across 25,000 users in U.S. federal courts, including judges and court staff.

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