Software Solutions and Generative AI
- Jan 30
- 2 min read
Updated: Feb 3

Understanding legal tech requires recognising the distinction between generative AI tools and practical software solutions like ProVision. While generative AI has garnered attention for its ability to generate content autonomously, and its capabilities are incredible, it is not without drawbacks, often prone to hallucinations and the ever-present question as to whether, in the face of detailed instructions, tweaking and then a detailed review, it is ‘quicker just to do it yourself’. While it is clear these tools will improve and evolve, for now, these questions remain.
By contrast, ProVision takes a more focused approach. It offers a practical way to manage
provisions while keeping lawyers closely involved through its built-in review and amendment
tools. And importantly, it still leaves lawyers at the centre of the work, drawing on their own
judgement and experience as the matter progresses.
ProVision isn’t designed to replace lawyers. Its purpose is to handle the routine parts of provision management so lawyers can concentrate on the work that requires their judgement. It gives teams a clear view of progress and helps everyone stay aligned, with dashboards that update in real time and are easy to use.
Rather than trying to take over the process, ProVision integrates into the systems lawyers already use and helps keep the workflow easier to run. It makes the side letter process faster and more organised, while keeping the essential content, review and amendment stages under lawyer control. This helps prevent avoidable errors and supports a smoother interaction between technology and the legal team.
Because the work relies so much on accuracy and sound judgement, ProVision is designed to sit alongside daily legal tasks without getting in the way. It supports lawyers in the decisions that require their attention and uses automation to take care of the tasks that tend to slow things down. As legal tech keeps moving forward, ProVision takes a measured approach: the tool helps, but it doesn’t take over. It leaves lawyers in control and offers a clearer, more organised way to manage provisions.



