Clio today launched Clio Operate at Legalweek New York, expanding its push into the large law firm market.
Formerly ShareDo, the platform was acquired in March 2025 and now anchors Clio’s enterprise strategy, supporting firms with hundreds or thousands of users operating across jurisdictions and practice areas.
Large firms face growing operational strain as legacy systems create data silos, manual workflows, and limited visibility across offices. At the same time, AI is raising expectations for speed, coordination, and service delivery.
Clio Operate acts as a central operating system for legal work, connecting best-of-breed firm technologies while providing native workflow tools designed specifically for legal teams.
“Clio for Enterprise reflects our deep commitment to the large law segment,” said CEO Jack Newton. “Clio Operate gives firms a single pane of glass to manage operations with greater visibility and control.”
The platform enables firms to standardize complex workflows using low-code configuration, supporting thousands of matter types and accelerating new service launches.
In documented deployments, firms report reclaiming up to two billable hours per day per fee earner, reducing fixed-fee case lifecycles by 40%, and improving matter creation efficiency by more than 80%.
“We needed a system that could grow with us,” said James Harrison, Partner and IT Director at Leigh Day. “Operate’s modular workflows and automation give us greater control and efficiency.”
Clio Operate is now available to large and mid-sized firms across North America, with demonstrations underway at Legalweek.





