Organizations evaluating the best legal process outsourcing providers often find significant differences in how legal work is staffed, supervised, and delivered. Providers may offer similar services on paper, yet vary considerably in attorney qualifications, quality control procedures, project management capabilities, communication practices, and operational maturity.
For law firms and corporate legal departments, evaluating an LPO provider involves more than comparing service offerings or pricing structures. The education, experience, language proficiency, and oversight of the professionals performing the work can directly affect consistency, efficiency, and overall work product quality.
As part of the provider evaluation process, it is important to evaluate the operational framework behind the services being offered, including staffing models, quality control procedures, attorney oversight, scalability, and workflow management capabilities. Understanding how providers approach these areas can help organizations identify a provider that aligns with the specific requirements of their matters.
Key Takeaway
Provider evaluations should consider both service capabilities and the operational infrastructure that supports delivery of those services. Criteria such as quality control infrastructure, attorney oversight, scalability, workflow integration, project management capabilities, and relevant matter experience can provide valuable insight into how a provider may perform across complex legal matters.
Evaluation Criteria at a Glance
| Evaluation Area | Questions to Ask |
| Quality Control | How are reviewers calibrated, monitored, and audited? |
| Attorney Oversight | When are attorneys involved in review decisions and escalations? |
| Scalability | How quickly can resources be expanded when project scope changes? |
| Matter Experience | Has the provider handled similar matters, industries, or workflows? |
| Workflow Integration | How does the provider integrate with existing client processes and platforms? |
| Project Management | What reporting, communication, and oversight structures are provided? |
What to Look for in a Legal Process Outsourcing Provider
Quality Control Infrastructure
The single most significant differentiator among legal process outsourcing providers is how quality control is structured and executed. A provider with defined quality control procedures, systematic review of work product, inter-rater reliability monitoring, escalation protocols, and documented review standards is more likely to produce consistent and defensible outcomes than one that relies primarily on individual reviewer judgment.
When evaluating a provider’s quality control model, legal teams should ask:
- How is reviewer calibration conducted?
- How is quality monitored throughout the project?
- What quality benchmarks are used?
- How are inconsistencies identified and corrected?
- How are quality findings documented and reported?
Providers that answer these questions with operational specificity rather than broad assurances typically have mature quality control programs embedded within their workflows.
Attorney Oversight Model
Many legal support projects involve decisions that directly affect litigation strategy, privilege determinations, regulatory compliance, contractual obligations, or risk management. The provider’s attorney oversight model is therefore a foundational component of both work product quality and engagement defensibility.
Organizations should evaluate:
- How attorneys are integrated into the workflow
- What decisions require attorney review
- How escalations are managed
- How supervision is structured
- Whether attorney oversight is built into standard workflows
For privilege review, internal investigations, regulatory matters, and other high-risk engagements, attorney involvement should be an operational component of the process rather than an optional add-on.
Scalability and Mobilization
Legal matters rarely remain static. Discovery populations expand. Investigation scope changes. Regulatory inquiries evolve. Transaction timelines accelerate.
A provider’s ability to scale resources while maintaining consistency is often one of the most important operational considerations. Evaluation questions may include:
- How quickly can review teams be deployed?
- How are reviewers trained and calibrated?
- How are additional resources added during active matters?
- How is quality maintained during rapid expansion?
- What reviewer populations are maintained between projects?
Providers that maintain trained reviewer populations and established onboarding procedures often mobilize more efficiently than providers that build teams from scratch for each engagement.
Matter Type Experience
Providers often vary in their experience, operational structure, service offerings, and workflow capabilities. Organizations should evaluate:
- Types of matters previously supported
- Typical project volumes
- Industry experience
- Regulatory exposure experience
- Review platform familiarity
- Complexity of prior engagements
Relevant experience often provides better insight into future performance than the breadth of a provider’s service catalog.
Workflow Integration and Communication
An LPO provider that integrates smoothly into the client’s existing workflow environment reduces friction and improves operational efficiency. Evaluation criteria should include:
- Project management structure
- Communication cadence
- Reporting capabilities
- Escalation procedures
- Platform experience
- Responsiveness throughout the engagement
For organizations utilizing LPO support across multiple matters, workflow integration becomes increasingly important over time. Providers that develop familiarity with client workflows, terminology, and expectations often deliver greater consistency across engagements.
Project Management and Reporting
Project management can sometimes be overlooked during provider evaluations, yet it is often one of the most important drivers of successful execution. Organizations should understand:
- Whether dedicated project managers are assigned
- What reporting is available
- How productivity is tracked
- How status updates are delivered
- How workflow issues are escalated
- How scope changes are managed
Strong project management supports visibility, accountability, and communication throughout the engagement lifecycle.
Security and Confidentiality Controls
Legal matters routinely involve privileged, confidential, and highly sensitive information. When evaluating legal process outsourcing providers, organizations should assess:
- Information security policies
- Access controls
- Confidentiality procedures
- Secure work environments
- Business continuity planning
- Data governance practices
Security controls should align with the nature and sensitivity of the information being handled.
Cost Structure and Predictability
Cost remains an important consideration when evaluating providers, but sophisticated buyers often evaluate more than hourly rates alone. Questions to consider include:
- How is pricing structured?
- What project management resources are included?
- What quality control functions are included?
- How are scope changes handled?
- How predictable are overall project costs?
For many organizations, predictability and operational efficiency are more valuable than simply selecting the lowest-cost option.
Ownership Structure and Firm Profile
For law firms and corporate legal departments with supplier diversity commitments or client-facing reporting requirements, ownership structure may be an important evaluation criterion. Woman-owned, minority-owned, and other certified diverse legal service providers may help organizations satisfy supplier diversity initiatives that influence outside counsel and vendor selection decisions.
Organizations should determine whether ownership certifications, supplier diversity requirements, or procurement policies play a role in their provider evaluation process.
Red Flags When Evaluating Legal Process Outsourcing Providers
Certain indicators may suggest operational limitations or elevated project risk. Examples include:
- Unclear quality control procedures
- Limited attorney oversight
- Inability to explain review workflows
- Minimal project management infrastructure
- Inconsistent communication practices
- Limited reporting capabilities
- Difficulty explaining scalability processes
- Vague responses regarding security procedures
- Heavy reliance on individual reviewers rather than structured workflows
Organizations should evaluate not only what services a provider offers but how those services are operationally delivered.
How Baer Reed Supports Legal Teams
Baer Reed is a woman-owned legal process outsourcing firm supporting Am Law firms, Fortune 100 companies, and corporate legal departments across document review, contract services, due diligence, privilege review, litigation support, legal research, and data privacy matters.
Through structured workflows, attorney oversight, dedicated project management, and scalable quality control processes, Baer Reed provides the operational infrastructure required to support complex and high-volume legal matters while functioning as an extension of the legal teams it serves.
Contact Baer Reed to learn how our team supports law firms and corporate legal departments across a wide range of legal matters.
FAQs
The most important evaluation criteria typically include quality control infrastructure, attorney oversight, scalability, matter-specific experience, workflow integration, project management capabilities, and security controls. Organizations that establish evaluation criteria before comparing providers are often better positioned to identify a partner that aligns with their operational requirements.
Read More: What Is LPO (Legal Process Outsourcing)? A Strategic Resource for Law Firms and Corporate Legal Departments
Quality control assessment should go beyond asking whether a provider has a QC process. Organizations should understand how reviewers are trained, how consistency is measured, how escalations are handled, and how quality findings are documented and reported throughout the engagement.
Read More: Understanding the QC Process in Document Review
Many organizations begin an LPO relationship with a defined single-matter engagement, such as a specific document review project, a due diligence transaction, or a contract abstraction workflow, before expanding the relationship across additional matter types. As the provider develops familiarity with the organization’s review protocols, escalation preferences, and workflow standards, the operational friction associated with matter setup decreases and consistency across engagements improves. Legal ops teams and law firm partners that establish LPO relationships before peak demand periods, rather than sourcing a provider under deadline pressure, are better positioned to expand those relationships efficiently as matter volume and complexity grow.
Read More: LPO vs. Contract Attorneys: A Practical Guide for Law Firms and Legal Departments
A structured evaluation process often includes defining evaluation criteria, developing consistent provider questionnaires, reviewing relevant matter experience, evaluating operational capabilities, and assessing provider fit before entering into a broader engagement.
For organizations with supplier diversity initiatives, client reporting requirements, or procurement policies, ownership structure may be an important consideration. Organizations should determine whether diversity certifications or ownership classifications factor into their vendor evaluation process.
Read More: PRESS RELEASE: Woman-Owned Business Certification









Mr. Reyes graduated with honors from the Ateneo de Manila University, where he received the Procter and Gamble Student Excellence Award. He obtained his Juris Doctor degree from the Ateneo de Manila School of Law. During law school, Mr. Reyes was part of the Philippine delegation to the Willem C. Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot held in Vienna, Austria. He was also a member of the Ateneo Society of International Law and the St. Thomas More Debate Society. He completed his internship at the Public Attorney’s Office. He wrote a thesis entitled: “To Kill A White Elephant: An Analysis of the Fiduciary Exception to the Corporate Attorney-Client Privilege”. Mr. Reyes is admitted to practice law in the Philippines and the State of New York.
Matthew Hersh earned a B.A. in Political Science from Columbia University in 1990 and graduated cum laude from Georgetown University Law Center in 1999. He also holds a master’s degree in international relations from the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service.
Cap. Avi Levak (Res. IDF) graduated from from Israel’s prestigious Ben-Gurion University of the Negev with a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and Mathematics. He is also a Leadership and Communication coach trained in TuT coaching by Alon gal in Israel. Avi specializes in high-level, in-depth analysis of business and client needs, within systems and software strategy and architecture.
Ms. Lardizabal-Manzano is a graduate of San Sebastian College-Recoletos, where she earned her B.A. in Political Science. In 2003, she received her law degree from Lyceum of the Philippines and was admitted to practice law in 2004.
Mr. De Guzman graduated from San Beda College with a degree of Bachelor of Arts Major in Economics and received his law degree from San Beda College of Law. He is multilingual and is fluent in three languages: Chinese, Filipino, and English. He was admitted to the Philippine Bar in 2003.
Ms. Aquino-Batallones obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree in Development Studies (with Minors in Global Politics and Hispanic Studies) from the Ateneo de Manila University. In 2011, she received her Juris Doctor degree from Ateneo de Manila University School of Law. During law school, she interned at Romulo Mabanta Buenaventura Sayoc & de los Angeles then became an intern of Ateneo Legal Services Center’s Clinical Legal Education Program.
Ms. Cruz-Anonuevo graduated cum laude and top nine in her batch from Miriam College with a degree of Bachelor of Arts in InternationalStudies. She obtained her Juris Doctor degree from Ateneo de Manila University School of Law in Rockwell. During law school, she interned in Rivera, Santos, Maranan & Associates. She was also part of Ateneo’s Labor Law Bar Operations. She wrote her thesis on, “Stealing Privacy: Limitations on Media’s Photographic Invasion.,” Ms. Cruz-Anonuevo is admitted to practice law in the Philippines.
Ms. Tyler graduated cum laude from Georgetown University and received her law degree, cum laude, from Georgetown University Law Center. During law school, she interned at the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. She also worked on The Tax Lawyer journal and was a member of the award-winning Barristers’ Council Mock Trial Team. Ms. Tyler is admitted to practice law in the State of California and the District of Columbia.