Hey there Legal Rebels! 👋 I’m excited to share with you the 66th episode of the LawDroid Manifesto podcast, where I will be continuing to interview key legal innovators to learn how they do what they do. I think you’re going to enjoy this one!If you want to understand how a bias toward action —
CounselLink’s Kris Satkunas on Rising Legal Spend, Law Firm Rates, and the Future of Value-Based Pricing
This week on The Geek in Review, we talk with Kristina Satkunas of CounselLink about what the numbers are saying in a legal market that still talks about change while clinging hard to old billing habits. Kris discusses the hard data behind outside counsel spend, drawing on CounselLink invoice data and Harbor survey results to compare what legal departments say they expect with what the bills are already showing. She makes the case that the objective data is stubbornly clear. Rates are rising, demand is not falling, and the biggest firms continue to capture a larger share of work.
There is a widening gap between hope and reality. Legal departments may believe they are on the verge of controlling outside counsel costs, moving more work in house, or shifting matters to smaller firms, but Satkunas notes that the billing data has not caught up to those ambitions. She sees some room for in-house expansion in more routine areas like employment work, especially with AI helping legal teams absorb more volume, yet the largest and most sensitive matters are still flowing to outside counsel. That tension gives the episode much of its energy. Everyone sees pressure building in the system, but the old habits of legal buying and legal staffing remain firmly in place.
The discussion also gets into the mechanics of better decision-making, and where there is practical value for legal operations leaders. Satkunas emphasizes that data only becomes useful when departments have enough discipline in their enterprise legal management systems to categorize work correctly, clean out outliers, and separate different matter types instead of lumping everything into broad buckets like litigation. She also explains why finance data alone will not do the job. The real insight sits inside invoice-level detail, where hours, rates, firms, and timekeepers reveal what is happening beneath the headline spend numbers. For listeners trying to build a stronger legal ops function, this part of the conversation feels like a polite but firm warning that dirty data still tells stories, but some of them are fiction.
There is an obvious strain on the billable hour model that AI is placing on it. Satkunas notes that while average partner rate growth has hovered around 5 percent, top-end lawyers are often raising rates even faster, especially as firms try to protect revenue from the work and people they still believe clients will pay for. At the same time, she argues that alternative fee arrangements have remained stuck for years, though AI may finally force movement toward value-based pricing. If technology reduces the hours required to complete the work, then the old logic behind both hourly billing and many flat fees starts to wobble. That leaves firms facing an uncomfortable question, which is how to price legal services based on value delivered rather than time consumed.
We’d say that Satkunas is neither cheerleader nor doomsayer. She is a patient observer of a market trying to pretend nothing is happening while the floorboards creak under everyone’s feet. Her prediction is that real value-based billing will begin to appear in pockets over the next couple of years, even as firms continue squeezing what they can from the billable hour in the meantime. For law firm leaders, legal ops teams, and general counsel, this episode is a sharp reminder that disruption does not arrive with a trumpet blast. Sometimes it arrives as a spreadsheet, a trend line, and a guest who quietly points out that the data has been trying to warn us for years.
Listen on mobile platforms: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube | Substack
[Special Thanks to Legal Technology Hub for their sponsoring this episode.]
Email: geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com
Music: Jerry David DeCicca
Transcript:
Sarah Tetlow: Reclaiming Control By Designing Your Day And Defining What Matters
In this episode, Steve Fretzin and Sarah Tetlow discuss:
- Designing a legal career around fulfillment, not just ambition
- Managing time, attention, and workload with intentional systems
- Reframing legal work through project management thinking
- Reducing overwhelm by structuring email, tasks, and daily routines
Key Takeaways:
- Success without alignment leads to quiet dissatisfaction. Steve shares how chasing
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A Cash Shortage During Hyperinflation: One Economist’s Account of What Socialism Did to Venezuela
Annual National Firearms Law Seminar
I will be one of the speakers in Houston on April 17 at the Annual National Firearms Law Seminar, the largest gathering of Second Amendment attorneys in the country. The seminar provides a unique opportunity for attorneys, judges, FFLs, and others interested in firearms law to discuss recent developments in the law.
The 2026 seminar…
Agentic AI: It’s A Whole New Bag of Risks
She begged “Do not do that,” then “STOP OPENCLAW.” Neither worked.
That’s what happened to Summer Yue, Meta’s Director of Alignment at their superintelligence safety lab. By the time she reached her desktop to kill the process manually, the AI agent she’d created had already deleted hundreds of emails. You would expect someone with…
Subtle Shifts in Online Travel: Hopper Lands RBC, AI Hiring Reveals Priorities & Booking.com Changes Course in Chile
Good Sunday morning from Seattle . . . Our weekly Online Travel Update for the week ending Friday, April 10, is below. It was a relatively quiet week in the online travel industry as evidenced from this week’s stories. Enjoy.
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- Hopper Scores Desperately Needed Victory with RBC. Last week’s newly announced partnership between Hopper
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Key Takeaways from Two Major Privacy Industry Summits
As I shared in last week’s edition, I attended both the IAB Public Policy & Legal Summit and the IAPP GPS sessions. This week, I want to focus on what I learned at IAB and in the US State Privacy Law workshop. Here’s the summary from my many pages of notes.
Sorry folks – it’s…
Court of Appeals denies Anthropic’s Motion about the Defense Department’s claim of “Supply Chain Risk”!
The NewYorkTimes.com reported that “A panel of federal judges on Wednesday denied a motion from Anthropic to stop the Department of Defense from labeling it a security risk, a setback for the artificial intelligence company in its battle with the Trump administration over how A.I. should be used in warfare.” The April 8, 2026 article…
Platform liability after Russmedia: Italian DPA Fines Platform for Allowing Phone Number in Sex Work Ads Without Consent
By Odia Kagan
How far does a platform’s responsibility extend when a user posts someone else’s personal data in a classified ad, especially one involving sensitive subject matter like sex work? The Italian Data Protection Authority (Garante) recently fined online classifieds platform Bakeca S.r.l. after an unknown user published two ads, including an explicit offer…