Auridici helps GCs and legal teams identify where AI can genuinely reduce friction, improve access to knowledge, support drafting, and clean up intake or triage — using infrastructure they already trust, with governance designed in from the start.
We do not sell software. We help clients avoid unnecessary vendor lock-in by showing what is worth doing first, building native-first inside Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace, and adding specialist tooling only when the mission clearly justifies it.
Own your data. Own your operating logic. Keep control visible.
A board-readable view of where AI can create value now, where governance is needed, and what should wait.
Intake, triage, knowledge access, drafting support, approvals, registers, and underused tenant tools.
GCs, legal operations leaders, and governance-sensitive teams who want progress without black-box experimentation.
Discover the use cases before buying the platform. Most legal teams do not need another black box. They need clarity on where AI is genuinely useful, where it should stay human-led, and what can be done natively first.
Keep the first step bounded. Discovery is designed to be concrete: a structured brief, a small number of stakeholder inputs, a prioritised diagnostic pack, and a decision call.
Leave with something usable. Clients receive a usable roadmap, named quick wins, and a clearer view of whether to implement, train, govern, or deliberately pause.
Usually 1–2 weeks, a lead conversation, targeted follow-up inputs, and a final review.
Independent, native-first, governance-led, and built to leave the client with visible control.
Many GCs suspect AI can do far more for their teams, but they are stuck between vague hype, tool sprawl, and uncertainty about what is safe, useful, or worth prioritising.
That leaves a vacuum for an independent legal business architect who can identify practical use cases, use the infrastructure already in place, and reduce risk without tying advice to a software sale.
Auridici closes that gap: anti-vendor by design, native-first by default, and governance-led from use-case discovery through implementation.
Show where AI can remove friction, where it should stay human-led, and what the board can back with confidence.
The promise is practical: discover the right AI use cases, implement them cleanly, and govern them without transformation theatre.
Governance architecture, process optimisation, software configuration, documentation, training, and implementation support — not reserved legal advice.
Technology remains the means, not the identity. Better use of AI beats louder AI theatre.
The point is not AI for its own sake. It is practical uplift: faster triage, cleaner intake, better knowledge access, stronger drafting support, and governance that stays credible when scrutiny arrives.
Human-verified alignment for AI negotiation and decision-making where judgement still matters.
Tenant-native architecture and data integrity discipline that can bridge legal, operational, and security concerns.
AI governance posture for EU AI Act readiness, NIS2-adjacent controls, and documented oversight.
The standard is practical: sound judgement, sensible security posture, and governance that can be explained to leadership, legal, and operational stakeholders without theatre.
Where useful, Auridici documents workflows, controls, governance decisions, and handover materials in plain working documentation and reusable protocols so institutional memory stays with the client.
The method is legible. Clients can see how decisions, controls, and workflows are structured without needing a black box explanation.
Your data, your logic, and your operating model stay on infrastructure you already trust.
Protocols, templates, and working documentation reduce dependence on any one consultant or platform.
The offer ladder stays commercially clean: discover the best use cases first, configure second, train and govern third, and only then layer in specialist agentic work.
The diagnostic wedge. We show where AI can genuinely reduce friction, where current tools are underused, and where governance is needed before anything scales.
The practical operating core inside the client tenant: matter architecture, workflow logic, controls, forms, automations, and governance baseline.
Role-specific AI literacy, operational training, and implementation guidance built for teams that need evidence, not just awareness.
Ongoing review, refinement, policy refresh, escalation support, and governance cadence once the operating core is in place.
For some teams, this functions like a fractional head of legal operations for governance-sensitive AI and workflow adoption.
Controlled agentic or specialist AI work sits after the foundations exist. Auridici does not lead with “jets” for bicycle-level problems. High-stakes specialist work comes last, not first.
A structured 45–60 minute conversation about how work actually moves, where AI could remove friction, where approvals stall, and where the team suspects more value is available.
A governance-led review of workflows and tooling that distinguishes which use cases can be solved natively, which may justify selective agents, and what should remain grounded.
Executive summary, AI use-case map, friction map, priority matrix, named quick wins, and a staged implementation roadmap designed to circulate internally.
A practical walkthrough of what should happen next: implementation, training, ongoing governance support, or a deliberate decision not to add complexity.
Discovery is designed as a fixed-scope first step for teams that want clarity before they add tools, launch pilots, or create governance work they cannot yet sustain.
A typical engagement involves a lead conversation, a small number of targeted stakeholder inputs, workflow analysis, and a final review with named priorities and next-step options.
The output is meant to travel: a diagnostic pack that can be read by leadership, legal operations, and adjacent stakeholders without translation.
Usually completed over 1–2 weeks depending on stakeholder availability.
Usually the GC or legal lead, with targeted input from operations, IT, security, or adjacent owners where needed.
The trucks / drones / jets model explains how Auridici stays anti-vendor without becoming anti-technology.
Reliable, unsexy heavy haulers: SharePoint Lists, document structures, forms, Power Automate, workflow controls, and disciplined operating logic.
Off-the-shelf assistants for repeatable reasoning and workflow lift: useful, fast, and scalable once the roads and controls already exist.
Powerful, expensive, and sometimes necessary — but only when the mission is narrow, high-stakes, and the economics genuinely justify the complexity.
Auridici is strongest with regulated, governance-sensitive, or integration-heavy organisations that need judgement, speed, and defensible operating design without another black box.
High documentation standards, regulated change, and pressure for cleaner systems that are easier to trust and audit.
Strong fit for AI literacy, model governance, controlled workflows, and confidence under internal or external scrutiny.
Fast stabilisation for duplicated process, document disorder, fragmented tooling, and teams trying to absorb change without adding chaos.
Transport, logistics, and incident-heavy environments where process discipline, approvals, and documentation matter more than shiny tooling.
Auridici works best when the first conversation reduces uncertainty rather than adding more theatre. These are the practical questions the homepage should answer before anyone emails.
No. Auridici is independent by design. Recommendations are meant to reflect the client’s workflow, risk posture, and existing estate — not a resale target.
Where possible, inside Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace, with controls and documentation that remain visible to the client. Specialist platforms come later, not first.
A bounded diagnostic with a use-case map, friction analysis, priority view, quick wins, and a staged recommendation on what to implement, train, govern, or leave alone.
Usually a legal lead first, then selected operational, IT, security, or compliance stakeholders only where their input improves the recommendation.