Insights Articles

Claude, Relativity, Everlaw, and the Future of Legal AI: Why Connected Workflows Are the Next Frontier

Written by Cory Flynn | Jun 17, 2026 9:10:59 PM

 

The legal industry has spent the past several years exploring what artificial intelligence can do. From document summarization and contract analysis to eDiscovery review acceleration, organizations have been evaluating where AI fits into legal work and where it delivers meaningful value.

The latest announcements from Anthropic around Claude for Legal, including new legal-specific plugins and Model Context Protocol (MCP) connectors, represent another step in that evolution. While the headlines focus on the technology itself, the more important story is what these developments signal about the future of legal operations.

We are entering an era where AI is becoming increasingly connected to the systems legal professionals already use every day.

And for those of us who work at the intersection of law, technology, and operations, that shift is not surprising.

 

From Standalone AI to Connected Legal Workflows

The first generation of legal AI focused primarily on individual tasks.

  • A lawyer uploaded a document. An AI tool summarized it.
  • A litigation team exported search results. An AI tool synthesized them. 
  • A contract was copied into an application. An AI tool analyzed it.

 
While valuable, these workflows often required information to be moved between systems and introduced friction into the process.

What is emerging now is something different.

Technology providers like Claude are increasingly focused on connecting AI directly to legal repositories, review platforms, enterprise systems, and knowledge sources. The goal is straightforward: allow professionals to access information, perform research, synthesize findings, and execute routine tasks closer to where the data already lives.

This is where recent announcements involving Claude, Everlaw, Relativity, and other legal technology providers become significant.

The real story is not the connector itself. The real story is that the legal technology market is moving toward connected, workflow-driven AI.

 

What Claude's Announcement Really Means

For legal departments and law firms, the challenge has never been a lack of information. The challenge is finding, understanding, and acting on that information quickly and confidently.

While much of the attention has focused on Claude's new connectors and plugins, the bigger story is what these developments tell us about the direction of the market.

Organizations no longer want isolated AI tools. They want connected legal workflows that help them:

  • Locate relevant information more efficiently
  • Synthesize large volumes of content more quickly
  • Reduce administrative effort
  • Streamline routine workflows
  • Improve access to institutional knowledge
  • Accelerate time to insight
 
In litigation and investigations, these capabilities can help teams move from data collection to case understanding more efficiently.

This is not simply about working faster. It is about creating a fundamentally more intelligent operating model for legal work.

The winners in this next phase of AI adoption will be the organizations that successfully combine people, process, data, and technology into intelligent workflows that produce defensible outputs.

 

 

From Artificial Intelligence to Intelligent Operations

At Array, we believe the future belongs to organizations that move beyond individual AI tools and focus instead on intelligent operations.

Technology alone does not create transformation.

Transformation happens when technology is thoughtfully integrated into workflows, supported by expertise, and aligned to business outcomes.

That philosophy has shaped our investments in Array Intelligence and our broader approach to innovation.

Our focus has never been on chasing technology trends. Our focus has been on helping clients harness emerging technologies in ways that create measurable value, improve outcomes, and support defensible legal processes.

As AI capabilities continue to evolve, the differentiator will not be access to a particular model or platform. The differentiator will be knowing how to operationalize AI effectively.

Before incorporating a new AI tool, every legal team needs to first answer these questions:

  • Can the output be trusted?
  • Is the process defensible?
  • How are permissions handled?
  • What audit trails exist?
  • How is sensitive information protected?
     
    Harnessing the power of AI in a responsible and defensible manner requires a deep understanding of legal workflows, technology ecosystems, information governance, and the practical realities of litigation and investigations.

 

 

What We See Across the Legal Technology Landscape

One advantage of working closely with leading technology providers is that we have advance visibility into where the industry is headed.  

Recent announcements involving Claude, Relativity, Everlaw, and other legal technology innovators reinforce trends we have been watching for some time:

  • AI is becoming more connected
  • Workflows are becoming more intelligent
  • Legal operations are becoming more data-driven  
  • Security, governance, and auditability remain critical decision factors
  • Organizations are increasingly looking for partners who can help them navigate that transformation

 

 

The Future is Connected

The legal industry's AI journey is still in its early stages, but one thing is becoming increasingly clear: the future will not be defined by individual AI applications.

It will be defined by connected ecosystems.

The organizations that gain the greatest advantage will be those that successfully integrate AI into the fabric of their legal operations—connecting people, data, workflows, and technology into a more intelligent way of working.

That future is already taking shape. At Array, we are helping clients build it today.

Because the next generation of legal innovation isn't about adding another tool. It's about creating intelligent operations that transform how legal work gets done.