Too many lawyers still see their value as tied to time. More hours. More stress. More inefficiency. What if we stopped treating legal expertise like a faucet and started treating it like an asset? Dorna Moini, CEO of Gavel, makes the case that scalable legal products are not just the future of practice; they’re the key to sustainability, profitability, and purpose. If you’re still billing hour by hour, you’re leaving impact and income on the table.
Watch the full “Notes to My (Legal) Self” episode with Dorna here:
The Lawyer Who Built Her Way Out Of The Billable Hour
Dorna didn’t set out to disrupt law. She started with a domestic violence case. “I realized how much of the early phase of those cases was rules-based and repetitive,” she said. “I wanted something like TurboTax, but for domestic violence.”
So she built it. That prototype evolved into Gavel, a no-code automation suite that lets lawyers transform legal services into modular tools: things that run while you sleep, that serve people at scale, and that deliver consistency with less manual lift.
Her turning point was deeply personal. One client, a domestic violence survivor, was “above the income threshold for legal aid but couldn’t afford private counsel.” She was left to navigate trauma and the legal system alone. That, Dorna said, “was the moment I realized this isn’t just a poverty issue. It’s a middle-class justice crisis too.”
From Repetition To Revenue: Why Legal Products Scale
Legal knowledge compounds. So why don’t legal business models?
Traditional practice assumes one client, one case, one outcome. Scalable legal products flip that. They package expertise once and sell it again and again. This isn’t theory. It’s happening in Arkansas, where family lawyer Brandon Haubert built and launched ArkansasLawNow.com to serve the state’s 3 million residents with accurate, rules-based custody and divorce tools.
Biglaw wouldn’t touch it. Too small. Too local. But for the families who need it, it’s the difference between fair access and total overwhelm. And for Brandon? It’s a second revenue stream, a branding platform, and a way to serve clients who otherwise would fall through the cracks.
“Those tools don’t replace lawyers,” Dorna explained. “They free lawyers to spend time where it matters on strategy, empathy, and judgment.”
Why The Right Workflows Make Flat Fees Work
Flat fees are only profitable when delivery is efficient. Most aren’t. That’s why some lawyers still resist them. But automation changes that math. When intake, document generation, and basic guidance are rules-based and repeatable, a flat-fee model stops being a risk. It becomes a strategic edge.
Dorna’s team has seen firms build tools that automate divorce packets, eviction responses, and commercial lease reviews. One lawyer used Gavel to build a dynamic SOW generator for in-house teams. These are not one-off projects. They are monetizable assets.
“You can scale without burning out,” she said. “You build once. Then you earn often.”
Productization Isn’t Tech. It’s a Strategy.
The most common objection Dorna hears: “But I’m not technical.”
Her answer: You don’t have to be.
Gavel is a no-code platform. You define the logic. The platform handles the rest. You already know the if-then rules. You use them in every intake meeting and redline session. The only shift is codifying that judgment into reusable pathways.
Rules-based automation is best for structured logic and compliance-heavy workflows. Generative AI helps when creativity or redlining nuance is needed. The smartest lawyers use both, strategically, within defined boundaries.
This mirrors the contract world we navigate at TermScout. Our certified contracts, standardized clause libraries, and transparency layers function the same way. Legal becomes infrastructure when it’s structured. And structure scales.
Build Like A Lawyer, Not A Startup
You don’t need to leave law to build.
You don’t need to raise capital.
You don’t need a dev team.
What you need is a shift in mindset. One that sees repeat questions as design prompts. One that treats every well-worn playbook as an opportunity for systematization. One that stops tying value to time and starts tying it to repeatable insight.
As Dorna put it: “Technology won’t replace lawyers. But lawyers who use technology will replace those who don’t.”
The economics of law are changing. The builders are already winning. Your move.
Olga V. Mack is the CEO of TermScout, where she builds legal systems that make contracts faster to understand, easier to operate, and more trustworthy in real business conditions. Her work focuses on how legal rules allocate power, manage risk, and shape decisions under uncertainty. A serial CEO and former General Counsel, Olga previously led a legal technology company through acquisition by LexisNexis. She teaches at Berkeley Law and is a Fellow at CodeX, the Stanford Center for Legal Informatics. She has authored several books on legal innovation and technology, delivered six TEDx talks, and her insights regularly appear in Forbes, Bloomberg Law, VentureBeat, TechCrunch, and Above the Law. Across her work, she treats law as infrastructure, something that should be reliable, legible, and intentionally designed for how organizations actually operate.
The post Build Once, Earn Often: Dorna Moini On The New Economics Of Scalable Legal Products appeared first on Above the Law.