Legal Technology & Talent
The AI Apprentice
How artificial intelligence is reshaping the way junior lawyers learn — and what it means for the firms that train them.
The apprenticeship model has always been the backbone of legal training. By doing, and by watching, you learn how to listen to a client, read a counterparty, decide which hill to die on — and which ones to walk away from — and ultimately, get a deal done.
AI doesn’t change that. But the apprenticeship model can look very different depending on whether AI sits at the margins of a team’s workflow or at its centre.
“Both teams will produce capable lawyers. But one produces lawyers who are more productive while they’re still learning.”
Two models of training
Without AI integration
The traditional path
- Juniors accumulate hours on lower-stakes, disconnected tasks
- Subject matter expertise builds meaningfully — but slowly
- Strategic and client-facing work comes later in the journey
With AI embedded
The accelerated path
- Juniors move faster from grind into interpretation and delivery
- Senior wisdom still shapes judgment — time savings go to critical work
- Project management, quality control, and client liaison come sooner
For teams where AI is embedded in the workflow, juniors draft with AI-enabled input, layer on sense-checks, and apply their own context to the findings. Hard-won wisdom from seniors still shapes their judgment — but the time saved goes toward the work that actually develops them: project management, quality control, client liaison.
The compounding advantage
For the organisation, this is a compounding advantage. Lawyers who arrive at senior-level capability faster are more valuable sooner — and that gap, once opened, is difficult to close.
For the juniors themselves, it’s a head start that compounds over time. The question for firms isn’t whether AI will change legal training. It already is. The question is whether your team is the one benefiting from it.