The challenge for law firms is not too much information. It is poor signal quality - intelligence that is incomplete, unverified, or impossible to act on with confidence. In an environment where more data is an asset, the question is not how to reduce volume: It is how to ensure the right intelligence reaches the right people, trusted and complete.
Most current awareness conversations start in the wrong place.
When something isn't working, KM teams jump to the platform question: is it fit for purpose? Are we paying for the right sources? Should we change provider? Those questions matter - but asked first, they're impossible to answer well. The evidence needed to answer them is engagement data, and on most existing platforms that data either doesn't exist or sits behind a vendor request.
Before any platform decision can be defensible - renew, replace, or consolidate - the engagement question has to come first.
Are fee-earners engaging with what you put in front of them?
If yes, with evidence, your current awareness is working. If no - or "we think so, mostly" - it doesn't matter what platform you're on or what you're paying. You won't be able to prove value, defend budget, or know what to fix.
Engagement is the test. The platform decision follows from it.
Most content aggregators weren't designed for this. They were built to deliver content and count what was sent - not to show you what was read, by whom, or whether the firm is getting value out of the sources you're paying for. Ask one of them today how many of your fee-earners actively used the platform last month and you'll typically get one of two answers: a number that requires a support ticket and a few business days to retrieve, or no answer at all.
A modern KM team needs three things its incumbent platform rarely gives it:
Get those three right, and the platform decision answers itself - defensible to leadership, justifiable at renewal, grounded in evidence rather than instinct.
Want a quick insight into where your firm sits? Jump to the 5-question Engagement Health Check ↓ One minutes check, result emailed to you.
Or read on first.
Most platforms tell you how many alerts were sent. That isn't signal - it's volume.
Real signal answers the questions you actually have:
Most content aggregators don't surface any of this. Engagement data sits behind a vendor request - you raise a ticket, wait several business days, and get back a partial answer for one question. Ask a different question next week, raise another ticket. The data exists somewhere on their side of the firewall, but it isn't yours to interrogate.
When the data isn't accessible, KM teams answer those questions manually - the Friday-morning report pulled together by hand, the week-long BD request, the partner who wants engagement broken down by alert and the only way to answer is to cross-reference exports from multiple sources.
That work disappears the moment the person doing it leaves.
Better signal means read rates per alert, per fee-earner, per practice area, clicks per subscription source - in real time, without raising a ticket.
The fastest way to kill engagement is to send fee-earners content they shouldn't be receiving.
The mechanism is simple:
Irrelevance isn't a small problem. It's an engagement problem dressed up as a search problem.
Some content aggregators trade accuracy for setup speed. Pre-built searches and out-of-the-box filters get an alert running quickly, but the rules underneath are too blunt to handle the complexity of legal research. The result is a proportion of off-topic content in every alert. That's when fee-earners stop trusting the alerts.
The better answer is accuracy at source, before the alert is built. On Vable today, that means precise Boolean configuration handled by researchers who know how to craft a tight query. Later this year, AI-supported search will deliver the same accuracy without requiring Boolean expertise of the user - setup time approaches the speed of out-of-the-box, but the results stay precise.
Accuracy without complexity also expands who can use the platform - beyond KM, into BD, marketing, business intelligence, and practice groups. Current awareness stops being locked inside the team that can write a Boolean string.
Removing the need for Boolean expertise is what allows current awareness to expand firm-wide: every professional gets high-quality intelligence from day one, without configuration or specialist knowledge. That is not a shortcut. It is the deliberate direction of travel.
Better signal and less noise are useful internally. They become valuable when KM can prove what's happening to people outside the team.
Three audiences need different cuts of the same data:
There is a fourth requirement that IT and procurement increasingly raise at renewal: security. Vable is ISO/IEC 27001 certified - enterprise-grade date security built into the core, not bolted on afterward.
The risk isn't theoretical. Active usage on legacy content aggregators is often startlingly low - single-digit percentages of fee-earners using the platform in any given month, with no way for KM to see it without filing a request. Without engagement analytics, that ROI story stays invisible until renewal, when it's already too late to act on.
Engagement data needs to live in dashboards your team can build on - not exports that have to be reassembled each time someone asks the question.
A function that can't prove engagement is at the mercy of the next budget review. A function that can prove it is having a different conversation entirely - one where the question is "how do we get more of this?" rather than "is this still worth what we're paying?"
That is the ambition behind Vable’s Content Intelligence Platform: trusted, complete intelligence that reaches every professional who needs it - without specialist setup, and with the analytics to prove it.
Not ready to take it? Book a 15-minute call with our team instead - we'll walk you through what good-at-scale current awareness looks like in firms of your size, and where Vable fits in.
Further reading: Optimizing the tech stack - what to keep, replace, or consolidate