Practice management software vendors tout a multitude of features. But how are you supposed to sift through these features to figure out which ones will help you manage your firm?
Before you purchase legal practice management software, it’s important to understand the capabilities that most programs offer, so you can weigh each software’s strengths when narrowing down your selection.
In this article, we’ll discuss the most common features found in a legal practice management software platform that provide automation, security, collaboration, and intelligence, giving midsize firms the tools they need to practice efficiently, manage profitably, and grow strategically.

Modern legal practice management goes far beyond digital filing systems. Firms need a unified platform that supports the entire matter lifecycle—from intake to invoicing to analytics—while reducing administrative overhead and improving accuracy.
Matter management remains the core of any legal software platform. It’s the central hub for client and case data and allows your staff to view critical details, including client name, matter number, open date, key parties, and more, at a glance. From the matter dashboard, you can navigate directly to calendars, tasks, documents, emails, and related contacts, ensuring that all matter-related activity stays in one place.
Modern matter management must also support automation and collaboration. Automated workflows can create tasks, reminders, and deadlines based on matter updates, while integrated matter dashboards reduce context switching by linking calendars, billing, and communication tools. These capabilities help midsize firms maintain consistency and improve visibility across teams.
The days of manual timesheets are fading fast. Today’s timekeeping software uses automation and passive tracking to help timekeepers capture more billable hours with less manual work.
Many time tracking tools integrate into email, document editing, and communication platforms to automatically detect billable activity. Passive time capture, like Centerbase’s patented Automated Time Capture technology, identifies and records billable events (emails, meetings, phone calls, document work) without requiring attorneys to stop what they’re doing to enter time. This improves revenue capture, simplifies compliance, and significantly reduces non-billable administrative time.
Common tasks that can be captured include:
Learn How Legal Tech Is Evolving in 2025
Your software should do more than store documents. Discover the features modern law firms rely on most.
Browse the Legal Business Glossary

Accurate billing is essential for firm profitability, and modern systems make it easier than ever to generate polished, compliant invoices.
A core requirement of your legal practice management platform is that it should support LEDES billing, an electronic billing format that many insurance defense and corporate clients require. The LEDES process creates uniform billing practices across law firms and helps corporations and insurance companies process and compare law firm invoices. It can be a daunting process, so having LEDES billing built into your practice management system is critical.
Automated invoice generation and approval workflows is another core feature, as it can move pre-bills through approval chains, reduce bottlenecks, and enforce internal compliance.
Beyond internal efficiency, these features improve the client experience with clearer invoices, faster billing cycles, and online payment options that lead to faster payments.
Modern billing features include:
Firmwide calendaring gives teams real-time visibility into deadlines and events, and calendars typically include both staff schedules and shared resources such as conference rooms.
When integrated with matter management, each event ties back to a case, making it easy to view hearings, filing dates, and upcoming milestones. If the firm calendar syncs with Outlook, it reduces the number of clicks required to update schedules and ensures attorneys receive updates across their devices.
Operationally, this reduces scheduling conflicts, supports hybrid teams, and strengthens deadline management, especially when paired with automated rules-based calendaring.
Centralized, matter-focused task management has become a must-have for modern firms. Many platforms now offer Kanban-style boards inspired by tools like Trello and Asana.
With visibility across all matter-related tasks, you can see who in your firm is responsible for what and whether work is progressing as expected. This supports attorney accountability, improves transparency, and helps administrators balance their teams’ workloads.
Better task management means fewer dropped balls, more predictable timelines, and clearer ownership, which are all critical to help your firm meet tight deadlines and manage heavy caseloads.
Contact management serves as the data hub for clients, vendors, experts, opposing counsel, and referral sources. In legal-specific systems, contacts are linked to matters, making it simple to understand how each individual interacts with the firm.
This linkage powers critical workflows:
Key benefits of having a contact management feature in your law practice management software include:

Firms manage documents in various ways — through server drives, within practice management systems, or via advanced DMS tools like NetDocuments. The best legal software centralizes documents within matters, making them easy to locate and ensuring version control.
Document automation takes this further by populating templates with client and matter data. This reduces errors, saves time, and ensures consistency across the firm.
For example:
Furthermore, advanced search capabilities using AI and optical character recognition (OCR) allow users to search within documents, filter by metadata, and retrieve files more accurately, which significantly reduces the amount of time spent digging through folders.
Client portals have quickly moved from “nice-to-have” to essential. These secure online spaces allow clients to access documents related to their case, view bills, make payments, and communicate with their legal team.
Core capabilities of client portals include:
Portals reduce email volume, speed up response times from the legal team, and strengthen the client experience, which creates transparency and better engagement throughout the matter lifecycle.
See Centerbase’s Must-Have Features in Action
From matter management to billing automation, Centerbase gives mid-sized firms the tools they need to grow.
Explore Centerbase Features
Instead of relying solely on historical reporting, the most effective firms use real-time dashboards and predictive analytics to make proactive decisions.
Key performance indicators of law firm profitability include:
Predictive tools can forecast resource needs, identify underperforming matters, and inform pricing decisions, giving your firm’s leadership team the visibility they need to manage the business like a modern enterprise.
Essential reporting features to look for include:
Security is a core ethical and legal obligation of a law practice, and it’s getting harder to manage. According to the American Bar Association’s Cybersecurity TechReport, 29% of law firms reported experiencing a security breach. For midsize firms, a breach can disrupt operations, jeopardize client trust, and trigger costly compliance issues.
Encryption is one way to implement safeguards. It protects data by converting information into unreadable code, both at rest and in transit, ensuring only authorized users can access it. Multi-factor authentication (MFA) adds an extra layer of verification beyond passwords, making it harder for outsiders to breach firm systems.
Beyond cybersecurity, attorneys also have strict ethical obligations to safeguard client confidentiality under the ABA Model Rules. That means choosing software that provides the access controls, audit trails, and monitoring systems necessary to document who has viewed, changed, or shared sensitive information.
Automated conflict checking is also critical. By cross-referencing client, contact, and matter data, firms can identify potential conflicts before onboarding new work, reducing your firm’s risk of malpractice and strengthening ethical compliance.
Your legal software should include:
Together, these features allow firms to maintain confidentiality, protect client relationships, and operate with the ethical rigor the profession demands.

Tracking prospective clients is essential for sustainable firm growth and for understanding which marketing efforts produce revenue. Also known as intake management, this feature centralizes how firms capture, track, and convert prospective clients into paying clients.
Accurate intake data powers better forecasting and ensures no potential client slips through the cracks. Centerbase’s client intake and CRM capabilities streamline this experience by connecting marketing, intake, conflict checking, and matter creation into one efficient workflow.
Modern intake tools enable firms to:
Midsize firms need software that is flexible, secure, and built to scale. The best platforms combine these 11 must-have features into a unified system that supports every part of the practice, from timekeeping to billing to profitability analytics.
Centerbase delivers these capabilities through a modern operating system for law firms, unifying practice management, financial operations, and business development. Built specifically for midsize firms, Centerbase provides configurable workflows, automated time capture, advanced reporting, and secure client communication tools that help firms practice efficiently, manage profitably, and grow strategically.