Built for attorneys & law firms
Your clients get a polished legal brief every week. You spend 60 seconds.
Pick the topics your clients care about — regulatory changes, case law developments, industry-specific legal trends. We research, write, and format a branded briefing that goes out on your schedule. Your clients stay informed. You stay top-of-mind.
Here's what your audience sees every week:
Issue #14. Your clients think you spent the weekend reading federal registers.
Trusted by professionals at
“A client forwarded my regulatory brief to their board. The GC called me the next day to discuss retaining our firm for their compliance overhaul. One email, six-figure engagement.”
“I used to spend hours every Monday pulling together legal updates for key clients. Now I review the brief, add one or two client-specific notes, and hit send. My clients think I have a dedicated research team.”
The legal update you keep meaning to send
Every attorney knows they should keep clients informed about regulatory changes and legal developments between matters. And every attorney hits the same wall: who has time to write a polished client alert when you're billing 1,800 hours a year?
"I drafted a client alert on the new SEC rules. That was three months ago. It's still sitting in my drafts folder."
"I read legal publications every morning, but turning that into a client-facing communication? There's always a brief to file or a deal to close first."
"A GC told me they hired another firm because that firm 'keeps us better informed.' We're better lawyers. We're just worse at communicating."
SendSignal makes it automatic. Set a topic, pick a schedule, and your clients get a polished, branded legal brief that looks like you spent your weekend doing pro bono research for them. Every week. Without fail.
What happens when clients don't hear from you between matters
The average attorney at a mid-size firm spends 3–5 hours per week staying current on legal developments — reading opinions, scanning regulatory updates, monitoring legislative changes. At billing rates of $400–800/hour, that's $4,800–16,000/month in opportunity cost.
And that's just the reading. Drafting a client alert, running it through firm review, and actually distributing it? Most firms produce fewer than four client alerts per year.
The result: clients who don't think of you when a new issue arises, GCs who retain the firm that 'keeps us informed,' and a practice that grows only through referrals and RFPs instead of deepening existing relationships.
SendSignal costs less than a fraction of one billable hour. And it runs every week whether you're in trial prep or on vacation.
Set it up once
Set it up once. Look sharp every week.
Pick your topics
"SEC regulatory changes." "Employment law developments." "M&A trends." Choose one topic or five — each one becomes a recurring brief for your clients.
Set your schedule
Weekly on Mondays? Biweekly before client check-ins? You decide when clients hear from you. SendSignal researches and writes a fresh brief on schedule.
Review in 60 seconds
Each brief lands in your inbox first. Scan it, tweak a section if you want, add a client-specific note, or just hit send. It's ready to go.
Clients stay informed
Branded with your name and firm. Trackable opens. Your clients stay current on legal developments, and you're the attorney who made it happen.
What happens after 8 weeks of SendSignal
Week 1
Your clients are surprised — "Huh, my attorney sent a regulatory update without billing me for it."
Week 4
It becomes expected — clients start calling you first when a legal issue comes up that relates to something in your brief.
Week 8
A GC refers you to a peer — "My outside counsel sends the best legal updates. You should talk to them."
That's the compounding effect of consistent client communication. SendSignal just makes sure you actually do it.
Everything you need to keep your audience informed
Recurring Legal Briefs on Autopilot
Pick a topic, set a frequency, and forget about it. Your clients get a freshly researched legal brief on schedule — every Monday, every other Friday, whatever works.
AI-Powered Legal Research
Each issue pulls from legal publications, regulatory filings, court opinions, and legislative developments — then distills them into a structured brief with TLDR, Key Takeaways, and What To Watch.
Review & Edit (or Auto-Send)
Every brief hits your inbox first. Tweak any section to match your firm's voice, add a client-specific observation, or turn on auto-send and let it run hands-free.
Branded to Your Firm
Your name, your firm's branding. Nobody needs to know there's an AI involved. It just looks like your firm has a dedicated thought leadership team.
Open Tracking & Analytics
See which clients actually read your updates. Spot the GCs who open every issue — they're the ones most likely to send you new work.
16 Writing Styles
From formal and analytical to conversational and accessible. Each style controls the writing voice and layout — pick the personality that fits your client base.
See what your audience would receive
The Post-Chevron Regulatory Landscape — What Corporate Counsel Need to Know
Quick Take
Eighteen months after Loper Bright overturned Chevron deference, the regulatory landscape is still shifting. Federal agencies are losing challenges at a significantly higher rate, and regulated industries are bringing more preemptive challenges to agency rulemaking. The practical impact: corporate compliance strategies built on 'the agency says so' need to be reevaluated.
Context
The Supreme Court's 2024 Loper Bright decision ended 40 years of Chevron deference — the doctrine that courts should defer to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes. In the 18 months since, federal agencies have lost 37% of challenges to their regulatory authority, up from 22% under Chevron. The SEC, EPA, and FTC have been hit hardest. This has created both opportunity and uncertainty: companies can challenge regulations more aggressively, but the lack of deference also means less predictability in how statutes will be interpreted.
Key Highlights
- •Federal agencies losing 37% of regulatory challenges up from 22% pre-Loper Bright — the largest shift in administrative law outcomes in decades
- •SEC enforcement actions down 18% as the Commission reassesses which rules can survive heightened judicial scrutiny
- •Preemptive regulatory challenges up 45% as companies test the boundaries of agency authority before enforcement actions are brought
- •SCOTUS granted cert on two more agency authority cases signaling the Court intends to continue reshaping the administrative state this term
What To Watch
The Supreme Court's current term includes two major administrative law cases that could further limit agency enforcement discretion. Oral arguments are scheduled for March and April. Also watch for the SEC's revised rulemaking on climate disclosures, which is being rewritten to survive post-Chevron scrutiny.
Sources
Supreme Court Opinions • Federal Register • SEC Enforcement Statistics • Bloomberg Law • American Bar Association Journal
This brief was generated in under 60 seconds. No editing required.
“Can't I just use ChatGPT?”
Doing it yourself
- Open ChatGPT, write a prompt, iterate 3-4 times to get decent legal commentary
- Copy-paste into an email, fix formatting, add firm disclaimers manually
- No sources cited — you can't point clients to the actual opinions or regulations
- No branding — looks like an AI dump, not a professional legal communication
- No scheduling — you have to remember to do this every week between depositions and deal closings
- No tracking — no idea if clients actually read it
SendSignal
- Type a topic once. That's it.
- Professionally formatted, ready to send to clients
- Every claim linked to real sources
- Your name, your firm's brand, your professional voice
- Runs on autopilot — never miss a week, even during trial prep
- Open tracking and analytics built in
ChatGPT gives you a wall of text. SendSignal gives you a researched, formatted, branded legal brief that's ready to send to clients — with real sources, your firm's branding, and delivery scheduling.
Built for attorneys & law firms. Not marketers.
This is for you if…
- You're an attorney or firm leader who wants clients to stay informed about legal developments between matters
- You've been meaning to publish client alerts more often but can't find the time between billable work
- You want GCs and business leaders to see you as the attorney who always knows what's coming
- You value client retention and business development without spending your weekends writing thought leadership
This probably isn't for you if…
- You're looking for a mass email marketing tool (try Mailchimp)
- You want to grow a subscriber list for legal thought leadership (try Substack or JD Supra)
- You enjoy spending 5 hours a week researching legal developments and writing client alerts from scratch
- You need a full practice management or legal research tool
Less than your team's weekly coffee order
Three plans. No trials. Pick the one that fits and start sending polished briefs today.
Brief
Everything you need to start sending.
- 3 briefs per month
- 1 writing style
- 10 audience members
- Basic analytics
- Email delivery
Less than a fancy coffee. Your audience gets smarter every week.
Briefing
For the professional who's done being inconsistent.
- 12 briefs per month
- All 16 writing styles
- 50 audience members
- Full analytics & open tracking
- Regeneration
- Custom email branding
- Auto-send & scheduling
$1/day to never miss a weekly update again.
BriefingRoom
Unlimited everything for your entire team.
- Unlimited briefs
- All 16 writing styles
- Unlimited audience
- Multiple topics & schedules
- Team collaboration
- Priority support
- Advanced analytics
One hour of a consultant's time. Unlimited weekly briefings.
Frequently asked questions
Is the content appropriate for client-facing legal communications?
SendSignal generates factual, source-cited legal commentary — not legal advice. Most firms treat it like a curated legal developments newsletter. We recommend having your first brief reviewed by a partner or your professional responsibility team. The content sticks to reporting developments, not providing counsel.
What legal sources does it pull from?
Each brief draws from court opinions, regulatory filings, legislative developments, and legal publications — Bloomberg Law, ABA Journal, Federal Register, and more. Every claim is linked to its source so you and your clients can verify and dig deeper.
Will my clients know it's AI-generated?
No. Briefs are branded with your name and firm identity. The writing styles are designed to feel human and analytical — not like AI output. Your clients will think your firm has a dedicated thought leadership program.
Can I focus on a specific practice area?
Yes. Create briefs focused on any area of law — corporate governance, employment law, data privacy, M&A, IP, tax, or regulatory compliance. Each brief has its own topic, so you can send different content to different client segments.
How is this different from firm-produced client alerts?
Most firms produce a handful of client alerts per year because they're labor-intensive. SendSignal lets you send weekly or biweekly briefs on any topic with minimal effort — dramatically increasing your touchpoints with clients without diverting attorney hours from billable work.
Can I send different briefs to different client groups?
Yes. Create separate briefs for different practice areas or industries — one for financial services clients about SEC developments, another for tech clients about data privacy. Each brief has its own topic, schedule, and audience list.
Is there a free trial?
We don't do free trials because the product doesn't make sense without seeing a real brief. Instead, you can generate a free sample on any topic before you pay anything. If the sample impresses you, pick a plan. If it doesn't, no hard feelings.
Your clients are waiting to hear from you. Between matters.
Not just when you're billing. Not only during active engagements. Your first legal brief takes 60 seconds to set up — and it'll keep showing up every week after that. No credit card required for your sample.