In Brief Community Challenge: Sow Something Different

This November, let's cultivate some CoCounsel creativity! Fallen leaf

We often hear "CoCounsel is just for legal research," but we know you've been using it for so much more! This month, we're challenging you to show us one unique way you've used CoCounsel that you might normally ask Google or ChatGPT.

Whether it's drafting a blog post, summarizing a long email, or even asking for productivity tips, share your brilliant "sow something different" moment in our community thread. Your discovery could inspire someone else's next breakthrough!

Plus, everyone who shares is automatically entered to win one of three $50 Amazon gift cards. It's our way of saying thanks! TurkeySparkles

Challenge ends November 30th at 11:59 pm – so make sure to enter before it's too late! pieMaple leaf

Parents
  • It never occurred to me to use CoCounsel in the same manner as ChatGPT!  I tested it with a vague prompt I would normally ask ChatGPT: How can I be more productive with my emails?  It surprised me. Instead of giving me generic inbox tips, it gave me real, practical steps. It suggested specific rules and filters to help sort client emails from internal conversations, templates for common responses, a simple way to prioritize based on deadlines and matter status, and a reasonable batching schedule with room for truly urgent items.

    Everything it suggested was easy to put into practice in Outlook and felt very natural for how legal professionals manage their workload and communication. Overall, it was more effective than I expected and genuinely helpful for getting my inbox under control!  It even helped me rewrite this post for better flow!

Reply
  • It never occurred to me to use CoCounsel in the same manner as ChatGPT!  I tested it with a vague prompt I would normally ask ChatGPT: How can I be more productive with my emails?  It surprised me. Instead of giving me generic inbox tips, it gave me real, practical steps. It suggested specific rules and filters to help sort client emails from internal conversations, templates for common responses, a simple way to prioritize based on deadlines and matter status, and a reasonable batching schedule with room for truly urgent items.

    Everything it suggested was easy to put into practice in Outlook and felt very natural for how legal professionals manage their workload and communication. Overall, it was more effective than I expected and genuinely helpful for getting my inbox under control!  It even helped me rewrite this post for better flow!

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