Definition
What is a modern practice management system?
A practice management system is the central software platform a law firm uses to run its entire business. Unlike a single legal-tech tool, it covers the full lifecycle of a matter — from intake to final invoice.
A modern practice management system bundles several functional areas: case management and digital case file (E-Akte — clients, parties, documents, calendar, deadlines, conflict checking), drafting and correspondence (with beA integration and electronic court communication / ERV — formerly EGVP, templates, clause library, AI-assisted drafting), contract management and contract analysis, dunning and debt collection (Mahnverfahren, court-ordered dunning proceedings, debt-collection workflows), billing (time tracking, RVG billing, fee billing, hourly billing, partner revenue distribution), accounting (general ledger, escrow accounts, GKG, DATEV connection), controlling (KPI dashboards, profitability, utilisation), client communication (portal, e-sign, secure messaging) and mobile access through native iOS and Android apps.
Legacy systems like RA-MICRO, AnNoText, Advoware or DATEV Anwalt have grown over decades and cover many of these functions — typically as a collection of separate modules with per-seat licensing and AI bolted on as an afterthought. The new generation is AI-native by design: AI is not an extra module but a continuous layer across every workflow — from a small Anwaltskanzlei with three attorneys to a Wirtschaftskanzlei with two hundred.
A modern practice management system in 2026 does four things. It replaces manual routine with reliable AI automation. It is integrated across every function rather than a loose toolbelt. It is compliance-by-design — §43e BRAO, §203 StGB and GDPR are baseline, not extra effort. And it scales linearly from solo practitioner to 200-attorney partnership on one codebase.