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How LawyerGo works for verified lawyer collaboration, task tracking, alerts, and direct fees.
Free for lawyers: why LawyerGo never touches your money
LawyerGo takes no commission and charges no fees. Any fee is agreed and settled directly between the lawyers. Here is how that works in practice.
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9 articlesInside LawyerGo: how real-time task tracking works
Delegating used to mean going dark until the colleague reported back. A look at how live tracking keeps everyone informed without a single status-chasing email.
Local counsel fees without platform commission: how lawyers should agree terms
LawyerGo does not take commission or process payments. That makes direct fee discipline between lawyers more important, not less.
App Store readiness for a legal marketplace: what must be prepared before launch
If LawyerGo shows App Store and Play Store buttons, the store experience must be real, consistent, and ready for lawyer trust checks.
The trust copy every LawyerGo page needs
A lawyer-to-lawyer platform should repeat its boundaries clearly: not a law firm, no legal advice, verified lawyers, direct fees, conflicts, and client consent.
Why direct fees are a brand advantage for LawyerGo
No commission is not only a pricing point. It supports LawyerGo’s position as a neutral workflow layer between lawyers.
Cross-border task tracking for lawyers: why status matters
Delegation fails when the lead lawyer loses visibility. Task tracking gives the client-facing lawyer a record of scope, status, documents, and completion.
Support and account deletion pages matter for legal apps
For a legal marketplace, support, privacy, and account deletion pages are not housekeeping. They are part of trust and store readiness.
SSL and www domain trust for lawyer platforms
A trust-first legal platform cannot afford certificate errors, broken www redirects, or inconsistent canonical URLs.