Vol. 76, No. 11, November
2003
Mail: More E, Less Snail
Electronic information delivery is in our future.
Are you missing out?
by George C. Brown,
State Bar executive director
In 1995, State Bar leadership and
management worried whether the State Bar could afford this new thing
called the Internet and a Web site, whatever that was.
Only six years before, upon the insistence of President Gerry
O'Brien, the State Bar acquired its first fax machine. In the early
1990s, the Bar spent $20,000 providing members with toll-free dial-up
access to an electronic bulletin board system as an early experiment in
electronic information sharing. Later, in 1995, those same technology
leaders - Gary Sherman of Port Wing, Mark Pennow of Green Bay, Bob
Hagness of Mondovi, and John Lederer and Jim Jaeger of Madison - were
urging the Bar to create a Web site. How could the Bar afford this?
The State Bar now has two Web sites. That fledging Web site, WisBar,
has earned various national awards and is undergoing a major
restructuring to make it more dynamic and user friendly. The first of
these improvements, WisBar's new Marketplace, now makes it easier to
locate and purchase State Bar products or register for CLE seminars. In
September, more than one million pages of material were accessed through
WisBar, a record-setting month for traffic. In addition, more than 5,100
attorneys subscribe to WisBar's CaseLaw Express, receiving free weekly
case law updates by email.
LegalExplorer, the State Bar's public site, launched three years ago.
Today, consumers access 44,000 pages from the site monthly, looking for
basic legal information and referrals to lawyers. Nearly half of all
referrals to the Bar's Lawyer Referral and Information Service now come
through this Web site.
Live Webcasting of State Bar CLE seminars began this fall, with
nearly 200 lawyers tuning into the October ethics program from the Bar
Center or their own computers.
Today, the Bar is facing the same question it did in 1994, only in
reverse. How can the Bar continue to mail information to members when it
can deliver it electronically more cost-effectively? To save money and
speed delivery, sections, divisions, and committees are beginning email
delivery of their newsletters. State Bar Grassroots program members and
various sections regularly receive email "practice alerts" about new
laws that substantially affect their practices. And members receive
monthly by email the 60-Second CLE Update announcing upcoming seminars;
this means less State Bar mail in your mailbox each month.
Electronic delivery is our future. I receive four professional
newsletters a month; none of them arrive by mail. The State Bar has
email addresses for only 70 percent of its members. If you haven't
already, I encourage you to provide your email address to the State Bar
so that you will continue to receive information important to your
practice.
Wisconsin
Lawyer