Problem statement
Backlogs are not only a document-upload problem.
Court delay often compounds across intake, correction, service, proof, scheduling, and packet readiness. A filing can be received while the work needed to move it remains scattered, aging, or invisible.
IntakeCorrectionServiceSchedulingPacket readinessCourt review
Product positioning
Legal operations infrastructure, not another case-record label.
Record-centered systems preserve case history, filings, docket entries, and documents. ProSe focuses on the operational work required to move a matter forward: queues, deficiencies, service and proof exceptions, slotting needs, readiness checks, and measurable aging.
What it does
A court-facing operations layer for visible, reviewable work.
Receives and organizes packetsPublic filing starts with upload, editable review, and packet status.
Surfaces missing itemsDeficiency reasons and correction loops are visible as work, not guesswork.
Tracks service and proofScheduled matters can be flagged before readiness breaks downstream review.
Connects scheduling to readinessHearing slotting and packet completeness appear in the same operational model.
Separates decision-ready workJudicial review can focus on corrected, organized, source-backed packets.
Measures queue healthFirst-touch time, correction turnaround, slotting lag, aging bands, and readiness trends become visible.
What to say
Careful, defensible positioning.
What not to claim
No hype, vendor attacks, or automated-decision implication.
Copy-ready boilerplate
Use this paragraph when describing the public demonstration.
ProSe Legal Operations Platform helps courts move from document intake to operational visibility: what is waiting, what is deficient, what is unscheduled, what lacks service or proof, and what is ready for review. The public demonstration uses fictional records to show how upload-first filing, human review, clerk queueing, correction handling, scheduling readiness, packet readiness, and operational metrics can work together without replacing the court record system.