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Why Student Perspectives Matter for the Future of AI-Enabled Business

  • Writer: The LegalTechPolicy.com Team
    The LegalTechPolicy.com Team
  • Apr 16
  • 3 min read

Never has it happened that school children who would soon begin their university lives, might even write about the value of legal management, and the real impact of AI in affecting businesses.


Thank you Rhea Nair (Class XII J), DPS Bangalore South for your delightful remarks for the LegalTechPolicy.com Playbook.


Here are Rhea's complete remarks:



In my school classes, we usually focus on the aftermath—what happens once a law is already broken and a case goes to court. However, this playbook shifts the perspective entirely by taking a proactive approach. It emphasizes steps like due diligence and vendor management to stop legal disasters before they even start.


Reading this made me realize that being a professional isn't just about solving problems; it's about being smart enough to avoid them in the first place. As a student entering a future defined by AI and digital data, I found this book incredibly relevant. It doesn't just treat technology as a cold machine; it focuses on the human side of change, highlighting why proper training and planning are the only ways to make new tools actually work.


I especially appreciated the use of mind maps and simple principles. As someone who prefers a thorough study method, these visuals made complex legal jargon much easier to digest and remember. The most important lesson I took away is the idea of accountability: even when technology makes a mistake, the human remains responsible.


Ultimately, this playbook isn't just a set of rules; it's a guide for the next generation of legal and business leaders to master the balance between human judgment and high-tech tools. It has changed how I think about my future career and the importance of managing the relationship between people and the technology we use.



Usually, Class XII is about entrance exams and graduation parties. It’s not usually about auditing 80-point legal-tech frameworks.


But Kiyoshi Dutta Patra (DPS Bangalore North) isn't just skimming the surface. In their review of the LegalTechPolicy.com Playbook, he skips the AI hype and goes straight for the throat of the problem: Systemic Accountability. Read his remarks:


At a time when artificial intelligence is reshaping every profession, The LegalTechPolicy.com Playbook arrives as a timely and much-needed resource for the Indian legal ecosystem. The Playbook comprises 80 standard operating principles centred on legal technology management and corporate accountability.


Structured across four to five crucial stages of legal management, the Playbook is designed as a system-oriented guide for law firms, start-ups, in-house counsels, and enterprises, helping them determine whether their challenges demand a strategic or a technological response, rather than blindly adopting AI tools.

The First Edition was donated to the Library of the National Forensic Sciences University, Gandhinagar, in February 2026, a recognition that speaks to its academic and professional significance.


For students of legal studies, this Playbook is a reminder that the future of law is not just about knowing statutes, it is about understanding the systems that deliver justice. Our alumnus has set a remarkable example.

The inclusion of voices like Rhea and Kiyoshi in the LegalTechPolicy.com Playbook marks a fundamental shift in the digital-legal landscape. Historically, the deep mechanics of legal management were reserved for the few — those who had spent decades navigating the friction between law and commerce.


But as the First Edition of the Playbook found its home in the Library of the National Forensic Sciences University, it signaled the end of that era of gatekeeping.


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