Universal Migrator has launched a brand-new website designed to make legal data migrations easier to research, explain, plan, and execute.
The new site gives migration consultants, IT professionals, legal technology advisors, and law firm leaders a clearer way to understand what Universal Migrator can do across hundreds of migration scenarios. Instead of forcing migration experts to piece together information manually, the website organizes key details by source system, destination system, export option, and migration path.
For anyone helping a law firm move from one platform to another, that means faster discovery, better client conversations, and more confidence about what a migration will involve before the work begins.
A Website Built Around The Most Important Migration Questions
Legal technology migrations are rarely simple. Consultants need to know what kind of system a firm is leaving, what data can be extracted, what destination platforms are supported, what credentials or preparation may be required, and what the client should expect throughout the process.
Universal Migrator’s new website is structured around those questions.
Quickly Review Available Connectors & Information
On the new connector page layout, consultants can see practical information about the application allowing them to speak with authority before a migration begins. this includes the type of system, how data is extracted, what credentials are required, what preparation the firm administrator may need to complete, and who is typically involved in the migration.
The connector page also highlights available migration destinations for that tool. For example, a firm leaving Case Pacer can quickly see migration paths into systems such as Clio Manage, MyCase, NetDocuments, iManage Cloud, SharePoint, Filevine, Google Drive, Dropbox, and many others.
Review Data Available for export
The new website also includes dedicated export pages that help consultants understand what can be extracted from a given platform.
This is especially useful when a firm is not ready to move directly into a new system, or when a consultant needs to first evaluate, preserve, analyze, or stage the firm’s data before the next phase of a project.
By making export capabilities easier to find, Universal Migrator helps migration experts answer one of the first questions clients usually ask: “What can we get out of our current system?”
Set Expectations and Plan with Confidence with Migration Overviews
Migration overviews pages are built around a specific source-and-destination combination, such as migrating from Case Pacer to MyCase.
The new migration path pages help you to prepare for a migration, answer client questions, and set client expectations by showing what data can be transferred, what the migration process looks like, and what steps are involved.
For law firms, that means a clearer understanding of what will happen to their data. For consultants, it means a more reliable way to plan projects, communicate scope, and guide clients through the transition.
Universal Migrator Helps Firms Move Into the Platforms They Want
The new website is built around Universal Migrator’s commitment to making data migrations easy to understand, and easy to execute.
Universal Migrator empowers migrations into leading legal and business platforms, including Clio, MyCase, NetDocuments, iManage, SharePoint, and many other applications. Whether a firm is moving into a practice management system, document management system, cloud storage platform, accounting tool, database, or analytics environment, Universal Migrator gives migration professionals a powerful engine for getting data where it needs to go.
The result is a better migration experience for everyone involved. Consultants gain a clearer, more repeatable process for executing migration projects. And law firms gain confidence that their data can move with them as their needs change.
For law firms considering a move – and for the consultants who help them get there – Universal Migrator’s new website provides a practical starting point for their next project.
Robert Ambrogi Blog