What Are Legal RFPs?
A legal RFP standardises how in-house teams brief, compare and engage law firms. It drives competitive tension, transparency and better value.
What is an RFP (Request for Proposal) in Legal?
In legal operations, an RFP (Request for Proposal) is a formal invitation from in-house legal teams for law firms or external service providers to bid on work.
But it’s more than a procurement ritual, if done well, a legal RFP is a strategic tool to bring cost-discipline, clarity, and comparability to the engagement process.
With Lawcadia, RFP capabilities are embedded into the broader spend and matter management experience.
But it’s more than a procurement ritual, if done well, a legal RFP is a strategic tool to bring cost-discipline, clarity, and comparability to the engagement process.
With Lawcadia, RFP capabilities are embedded into the broader spend and matter management experience.
Why Use A Legal RFP?
Without structure, selecting external counsel can be opaque: rates differ, scope ambiguities mix in, decisions may hinge on relationships rather than performance. Legal RFPs enforce competitive tension, transparency and evaluation consistency. They force law firms to define cost, deliverables, assumptions and risk.
Well-designed RFPs help you compare apples to apples: scope clarity, pricing models (e.g. fixed, capped, hourly), resource allocation and metrics of performance (KPIs, deliverables). With that, you make smarter choices not just on cost but quality, responsiveness and risk.
A legal RFP transforms counsel engagement from gut-based decisions to data-driven procurement.
Well-designed RFPs help you compare apples to apples: scope clarity, pricing models (e.g. fixed, capped, hourly), resource allocation and metrics of performance (KPIs, deliverables). With that, you make smarter choices not just on cost but quality, responsiveness and risk.
A legal RFP transforms counsel engagement from gut-based decisions to data-driven procurement.
Legal RFP Benefits For In-House Teams
With Lawcadia's matter-based RFP capabilities, you can issue an RFP to your preferred panel firms (or invite competition) directly from the platform. Firms submit proposals which are collected in the same system, then compared side by side via dashboards that highlight fees, assumptions, scope and other attributes.
Once you select a firm, the engagement flows into the same spend, matter and workflow framework. Any change requests or scope additions become managed steps, not ad hoc emails. That integration ensures the RFP doesn’t become a disconnected procurement exercise. The benefits for in-house legal teams are:
Once you select a firm, the engagement flows into the same spend, matter and workflow framework. Any change requests or scope additions become managed steps, not ad hoc emails. That integration ensures the RFP doesn’t become a disconnected procurement exercise. The benefits for in-house legal teams are:
Better decisions: You compare multiple proposals side by side rather than defaulting to a known firm.
Cost control and discipline: RFPs allow you to push for alternative fee arrangements or more efficient scoping.
Transparency & accountability: You document your selection process for audit or stakeholder oversight.
Stronger relationships: Law firms know their proposals are evaluated rigorously, encouraging better performance.
The Legal RFP Process
An effective legal RFP is a strategic tool that standardises counsel selection, enforces competitive tension, and embeds transparency into the engagement process.
Key steps in an RFP process include:
Key steps in an RFP process include:
Defining scope and requirements: Clearly outline the work needed, expected deliverables, and timelines.
Inviting and collecting proposals: Use Lawcadia to issue RFPs to multiple firms and standardise submission formats.
Evaluating proposals: Compare pricing, resources, experience, and risk management approaches using structured dashboards.
Selection and engagement: Once a firm is selected, integrate the matter into workflows, approvals, and spend tracking.
Allow conditional approvals and scoring within the RFP process, so decisions can be made objectively and efficiently.