Introducing AnoLawg
AnoLawg started with a simple frustration: small law firms are asked to run modern, responsive, financially disciplined practices, but the software stack usually makes that harder than it needs to be.
You buy one tool for matters. Another for billing. Another for payments. Another for intake. Another for client communication. Then you still need spreadsheets, inbox rules, saved PDFs, and a lot of memory to keep the real work moving.
AnoLawg is our answer to that problem.
Why we built it
We built AnoLawg from inside a working law firm, not from a generic SaaS checklist. That matters because the daily friction is specific.
Firms need to know what changed on a matter, what needs to be billed, which client messages are waiting, which documents belong where, and whether the business is healthy enough to keep serving people well. Clients need a straightforward place to see status, bills, documents, and messages. Attorneys and expert witnesses need a better path to be found, trusted, and referred.
The goal is not to make law practice feel like software. The goal is to make the software feel like it understands the practice.
Who AnoLawg is for
AnoLawg is built for four connected audiences:
- Law firms that want a practical legal CRM with matters, contacts, calendar, documents, billing, payments, team permissions, and client communication in one workspace.
- Clients who need free portal access to view their matters, message their firm, receive documents, and pay bills online.
- Independent attorneys who want a public profile and referral presence without buying a full firm CRM seat.
- Expert witnesses who want a professional listing and a cleaner way to receive qualified attorney referrals.
Those audiences are connected because real legal work is connected. A firm does not operate in isolation from clients, referral partners, co-counsel, or experts.
What it does
For firms, AnoLawg brings the core operating loop into one place:
- Manage matters, contacts, activity, calendar, tasks, and documents.
- Track time, generate bills, send payment links, and monitor trust balances.
- Invite clients into a secure portal for matter updates, messages, documents, bills, and receipts.
- Collaborate with attorneys and experts through profiles, referrals, and direct communication.
- Keep administrative controls close: permissions, roles, billing settings, audit views, and support tooling.
For clients, the portal is intentionally simple. They do not need to understand a practice management system. They need to know what is happening, what they owe, what they can download, and how to reach the team.
For attorneys and experts, profiles create a public surface area for professional identity, verification, practice areas, service locations, and referrals.
What makes it different
AnoLawg is opinionated about small-firm economics. The CRM plan is simple: $20 per user per month after a free trial. Client portal access is free for clients. Public profile upgrades are separate: $5 per month for Attorney Pro and $15 per month for Expert Witness Pro.
That structure keeps the firm workspace affordable while still giving professionals outside the firm a way to participate in the network.
We also care about the less glamorous parts: legal pages, consent flows, email preferences, billing receipts, support runbooks, webhook reliability, audit evidence, and operational checklists. Those are not marketing flourishes. They are what make software usable after the launch-day excitement wears off.
How to try it
If you run a law firm, start with the CRM trial:
If you are an attorney or expert witness, claim or create your profile:
If you are a client, your firm can invite you into the portal for free.
AnoLawg will keep improving from here. The launch is not the finish line. It is the point where the product starts being shaped by more real usage, more real questions, and more real legal work.