by Grace Caraan | Mar 6, 2026 | blog, court reporting services, legal process, legal technology, process serving
Efficient litigation management requires accurate documentation, reliable scheduling, and fast access to transcripts. For many law firms, court reporting services play a critical role in ensuring depositions, hearings, and other legal proceedings are recorded...
by Ross Headley | Feb 22, 2026 | blog, legal process, legal technology, notary public
If you're still chasing down notaries, printing stacks of documents, and waiting days for overnight packages to arrive, you're not just wasting time: you're leaving money on the table. In 2026, there's simply no good reason to cling to wet ink...
by Grace Caraan | Feb 17, 2026 | blog, court reporting services, legal process, legal technology, notary public
In Florida litigation, choosing how courtroom proceedings are recorded is not just an administrative decision. It is a strategic legal choice that can affect transcript accuracy, admissibility, appeals, and overall case credibility. Law firms, paralegals, and legal...
by Grace Caraan | Feb 13, 2026 | blog, legal process, legal technology, skip tracing
Imagine preparing a crucial motion for a civil case, only to discover that the defendant has vanished without a trace. Traditional methods, phone calls, mail, public records, fall short, and deadlines loom. This is where skip tracing steps in, providing courts and...
by Grace Caraan | Feb 6, 2026 | blog, legal courier, legal process, legal technology, notary public
How Remote Online Notarization Works in Florida Remote online notarization (RON) in Florida allows a commissioned notary public to notarize documents entirely online using secure audio‑video technology, identity verification tools, and tamper‑evident digital records....
by Grace Caraan | Jan 30, 2026 | blog, legal process, legal technology, process serving, skip tracing
Understanding Skip Tracing and Process Serving In legal proceedings, serving a defendant properly is not just a procedural requirement, it’s a cornerstone of due process. But what happens when a defendant actively avoids service? That’s where skip tracing comes in....