Archive for LexisNexis

LexisNexis Launches Protégé in Canada

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 22, 2025 by itnerd

LexisNexis® Legal & Professional today announces a range of enhancements to Lexis+ AI™ and the Canadian launch of LexisNexis Protégé™. This follows the successful launches of Protégé in the USAAustralia, and the UK. The personalized AI assistant intelligently supports legal practitioners in drafting, researching and advising their clients faster and more accurately, helping them focus on higher-value work.

Built with the highest levels of security, compliance and privacy, Protégé is now available in the Lexis+ AI legal workflow solution and will soon be available in the Microsoft Word drafting solution, Lexis® Create+.

Developed responsibly with human oversight, the agentic AI capabilities in Protégé allow it to complete multi-step tasks, review its own output and suggest improvements, leaving lawyers free to focus on strategic work.

Leveraging proprietary agentic and generative AI technology from LexisNexis, Protégé can:

  • Draft full, tailored transactional documents. It can check its own work before turning to human legal professionals for a final review. Documents can be further edited directly in Lexis+ AI or in Microsoft Word.
  • Produce fully drafted litigation materials with precision and consistency. It can create context-aware litigation drafts, such as motions, legal memos, arguments, and client correspondence.
  • Suggest legal workflow actions based on the type of documents uploaded (e.g. draft a memo, summarize).
  • Provide prompt assistance, proactively suggesting refinements to queries to help the user accomplish their goals efficiently.
  • Store tens of thousands of legal documents to secure Vaults. On each Vault, users can perform numerous AI tasks to summarize, draft, research and more.
  • Generate a graphical timeline of events from uploaded documents.

Protégé can be tailored to each user by integrating with Document Management Systems (DMS). This allows users to query, extract clauses and draft from their firm or organization’s knowledge base, making it easier to access and apply relevant precedents. Supported DMS integrations include iManage, SharePoint and others.

Through a customer-driven innovation program, LexisNexis have developed Protégé by working closely with several Canadian customers across the industry.

The LexisNexis global technology platform seamlessly integrates each wave of AI innovation, including extractive AI, which finds relevant results within data and provides deep insights; generative AI, which creates new content from data based on user-entered prompts or instruction;

To learn more about LexisNexis Protégé capabilities, visit www.lexisnexis.ca/protege. To learn more about Lexis+ AI, visit www.lexisnexis.ca/ai.

In Depth: Quicklaw For Microsoft Office

Posted in Products with tags , on November 24, 2012 by itnerd

I have a few customers who are lawyers here in Canada. The thing with lawyers is that they want their technology to work as well as possible and not radically change the way they work. If that doesn’t happen, let’s say they get very cranky. Take it from me, that’s not a good thing. An example of technology that most Canadian lawyers use every day is the LexisNexis Quicklaw service which allows them to search through case law so that they can do things like develop arguments to use in court. Up until now, this had to be done as a separate task. But now there’s a product that integrates this into Microsoft Office so it’s simply part of their workflow. Quicklaw For Microsoft Office was launched last week and it brings the following features to the table:

  • Search All, Background and Suggest: Access relevant information without leaving a document or email message through text recognition capabilities, identifying citations, legal entities and terms of art.
  • Check Cited Docs and Get Cited Docs: Use Get Cited Docs within the context of a document and pull citations into a side-by-side pane in a “virtual stack” of cited cases. Through text analysis, legal citations found in the document are highlighted. Case content can also be accessed and validated simply by clicking the citation.
  • Cases, Forms and Precedents: Access links to relevant cases, forms and precedents for topics of interest within Microsoft Word documents. During transactional drafting, legal professionals can work with greater confidence and efficiency by accessing forms and precedents.
  • PDF Converter and Pinning: Users can easily convert PDFs into Microsoft Word documents so they can tap into the full functionality of Quicklaw for Microsoft Office and begin research and analysis. Pinning can be used to quickly save documents, links and notes for future reference.
  • Quicklaw Browser and History Map: The Quicklaw Browser creates a one-click, seamless bridge between research and Quicklaw for Microsoft Office to enable deeper research within a document. Through the History Map feature, users can create an easy-to-follow graphic depiction of steps taken and documents accessed during the research process that can be used as personal or shared reference.

Here’s another key feature. Quicklaw For Microsoft Office appears as a tab within the ribbon toolbar of applications such as Microsoft Word and Outook so that it saves lawyers time and integrates into their workflow painlessly. All of this going to give lawyers the ability to, be more productive, increase their billable case load, or even leave the office early.

I had the opportunity to speak to Pamela Thompson who is there Director of Product Development at LexisNexis Canada last week and there were two things that I should mention. First is the fact that there are “feet on the street” so to speak to help firms get Quicklaw for Microsoft Office up and running as well as supporting it. That’s a good thing as I’ve always said that support often determines if a product succeeds or fails. The second thing was that they really took a lot of time working with Microsoft, and getting advice from users to make this product work as well as it does. When you put in that much effort to take the time to listen to users and to work with Microsoft, you’re going to get top shelf results.

If you want to have a look at what Quicklaw For Microsoft Office can do for you, here’s a video for your viewing pleasure:

By the way, if you’re a lawyer in the US, you shouldn’t feel left out. Lexus For Microsoft Office brings these features to the table for the American legal community.