Most legal tools have digitized the case file. Very few have digitized the work around it. LexOps exists to close that gap — an execution-centric platform designed for lawyers, law firms, legal teams and judicial experts, built in Belgium.
Legal systems have digitized cases more successfully than they have organized work. Matter records, billing ledgers and document repositories are mature products. What happens between hearings — who owns the next step, where workload is stacking, what is blocking whom, what changed since yesterday — is still reconstructed from email threads, drives and chat.
Traditional legal software owns the record. Generic productivity tools own collaboration. Neither owns the live execution layer. That in-between space is where a legal practice — firm, independent lawyer, legal team or expert office — actually runs, and where most of the leaked time, dropped balls and frustrated clients come from.
LexOps inverts the default logic of legal software. Work is not only visible by case — it's visible by person, role, task, workflow stage, period or matter. The same practice, seen through whichever lens the moment calls for.
A matter becomes a live operational surface instead of a folder. Ownership becomes explicit instead of inferred. Hearings and deadlines become preparation surfaces instead of passive calendar entries. Billing follows execution instead of being reconstructed on Friday afternoons.
We believe the winning position for this category is narrow and specific: more legally credible than a generic work-management tool, more operationally alive than a traditional case-management system. That's the only place a legal practice — firm, independent lawyer, team or judicial-expert office — gets both the specificity it needs and the daily leverage it's missing.