In summary, this was a great that still runs reliably, but it is now past its prime. So, if you start with X employees and decide to reduce by 1 person - you’ll be paying for that lost employee’s AA license for the balance of three years, as there is no cancellation. You can add a user and pay for that - but you can never reduce. – The contracts are three years in duration. – The price of AA includes features that most small firms do not need, like integrated credit card charging, and portals for clients to access the data. – Can you make custom variables and screens for entering data? Yes, but it’s an all-day project. The AA company’s owner is happy to do it for you, at consulting rates/hour. Only the most advanced computer user could ever hope to write a report. – Because of the way AA integrates with SQL, there is no native report writer. This inability to export data easily seems designed to bar people from getting their data out of AA to transition to another program. Suppose you want cull a list of contacts in your zip code to send them an email blast – you can see them on the screen, but you cannot output that data to create a specialized email/mailing list. – AA doesn’t allow you to export any data, at all. – Inserting merge fields into a Word or WordPerfect document is a bear! It involves installing macros and using a picklist. The makers of AA have sort of made apps for iOS/Android, but they are quite poor, IMHO. – It doesn’t run on an iPad or Android device. You must use a lower resolution like on an older computer. On a computer with a super high display resolution, the AA font is too small to be readable. – Also, AA’s user software doesn’t have scalable font size. There is a web version to access your AA database remotely but it has only a limited subset of functions you’ll want all your employees to be locked into Windows. – The user software is basically a proprietary browser/interface on your computer for viewing AA SQL database. This is not like a modern day cloud solution, where the company maintains the software. If AA goes down over a weekend, you either need to remote into the server or physically go into the office to reboot it. There are frequent problems with MS-SQL that require a user with IT skills to troubleshoot. – AA runs on a Windows computer dedicated to it at your office. AA is becoming so out-of-date, and the business model so unfriendly for SMB. However, that’s about where I would stop for the positives when compared to modern day competitors. My staff is loathe to move away from AA because we can see AA’s layout for onscreen forms is better. It makes more sense than that of Clio and PracticePanther, the two competitors we have explored actively. We really loved it, until recent years.ĪA’s clear advantage is the interface. There’s no doubt that this software has contributed to the success of our firm. Other than TimeMatters there were no sophisticated practice management programs back then, to my recollection. Our small practice of 5 staff has used Amicus Attorney (AA) since circa 2000.
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