I continuously educate myself in the field of computer science. By combining my legal expertise with computer literacy I teach legal professionals how to use AI, prompting, and automation in their daily workflows.
My mission is simple: to equip lawyers with digital skills that make them thrive in the 21st century.
I help lawyers and legal teams work faster and with less busywork; without cutting corners on accuracy or client confidentiality.
AI is not a future idea anymore. It’s already part of everyday legal work. Those who learn to use it well can keep their edge. I teach clear, practical and responsible ways to do that.
At university I was the student who took notes on a laptop. That practical habit turned into a career interest in digital workflows and LegalTech.
I began in civil law and litigation. I learned how to draft, argue, and manage complex files. Later I moved into intellectual property law, where I had to deliver creative solutions on a daily basis and learnt how to think outside the box. I first used automation to speed routine tasks.
After private practice I joined a global company as an IP specialist. Working internationally — and later moving to Cyprus — allowed me to combine legal work with automation in larger projects.
What began as small efficiency experiments became a focus: helping lawyers use technology to get work done better, not to replace judgment.
I believe you must understand a tool to use it well. So I studied, attended conferences, and completed Harvard’s Computer Science for Lawyers (CS50) course. I tested many AI tools and built practical workflows for legal teams.
When large language models like ChatGPT debuted, I started building real use cases: contract drafting templates, legal summaries, review checklists, and secure workflows. I now teach these methods to legal professionals in workshops and courses.
Since then, I’ve trained about around 1000 lawyers, including individuals and legal teams.
My aim is to make AI a useful, trusted part of day-to-day legal work: a practical assistant, not a shortcut around professional judgment.
I mix legal accuracy with technical know-how. My training method is practical, example-led, and immediately usable.
What I focus on:
I avoid tech jargon. I show you how to apply methods to your real cases, not hypothetical exercises.
I design group sessions so teams learn together and adopt the same practices. That makes change smoother and longer-lasting.
I prefer iterative work. We test, improve, and scale the solutions that actually help you. Many clients book follow-ups once they see results.
Everything is tailored. I do not use one-size-fits-all templates. Your practice area, systems, and constraints shape the final solution.
I continuously innovate. As technology evolves, my workshops follow up too.
Uniqueness
Solutions tailored to your practice, not copied from elsewhere.
Precision
I value accuracy and timely delivery.
Availability
I stay involved until the solution runs well, and I offer follow-up support.
Innovation
I continuously keep the content of my workshops up to date and incorporate innovative methods not seen in legal education.
The law should lead on technology, not follow it. The legal profession shouldn’t be considered as an outdated discipline; I work hard to keep lawyers digitally advanced and ahead of the AI curve.
Lawyers with their reasoning and research skills are already set to work well with technology. They just need the right methods to apply their knowledge.
If you want practical help to use AI in your work — consulting, tailored training, or an online course — I’ll help you make it useful and safe.
If you want to explore how AI can improve your daily legal work, contact me. Let’s have a short call or a group assessment.
Together we’ll find simple, reliable ways to save time, create value and keep quality high.