(163) Transformations + Subscriptions for Professional Services with Ed Kless of Threshold
Fri Feb 06 2026
Sign up for Practi, a new platform that helps law firms use subscription billing.
Here are the top 5 takeaways from this episode:
1. The Transformation Economy is the Future of Professional Services.
Professional services are evolving beyond commodities → goods → services → experiences to transformations. Clients will pay for meaningful life/business changes (opening a business, planning legacy, scaling to $1M) rather than just deliverables. Transformations subsume all previous economic levels and are best monetized through subscriptions.
2. Subscription vs. Recurring Revenue: A Critical Distinction.
There’s a fundamental difference between recurring (predictable repeat billing) and reoccurring (periodic invoicing). True subscription models create 5-10x higher business valuations and require upfront payment, automation, and a membership mindset—not just monthly invoicing for the same service.
3. Nature of Work Trumps Scope of Work.
Instead of selling defined scopes (hours, tasks, deliverables), professionals should sell nature of work (bookkeeper vs. controller vs. CFO; pair of hands vs. expert vs. collaborator). This shifts focus from transactional outputs to strategic relationships and enables premium subscription pricing.
4. The Billable Hour Persists Due to Inertia, Profitability, and Technology Gaps.
Despite decades of criticism, hourly billing survives because: (1) it’s still profitable enough, (2) switching requires overcoming massive inertia, and (3) existing legal/accounting tech is built to optimize billable hours rather than enable alternative models. Bottom-up transformation (solo practitioners first) is more feasible than top-down.
5. AI Won’t Replace Human Expertise—It Will Enhance It.
While AI can handle execution (like robotic surgery or document drafting), clients will still want human subject matter experts for consultation, strategy, and decision-making. The key is “prescription before diagnosis”—professionals must diagnose before prescribing solutions, and AI should augment rather than replace that consultative relationship.
__________________________
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Want to use the subscription model for your law firm? Click here to sign up for a new platform that helps law firms use subscription billing.
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Sign up for Practi, a new platform that helps law firms use subscription billing. Here are the top 5 takeaways from this episode: 1. The Transformation Economy is the Future of Professional Services. Professional services are evolving beyond commodities → goods → services → experiences to transformations. Clients will pay for meaningful life/business changes (opening a business, planning legacy, scaling to $1M) rather than just deliverables. Transformations subsume all previous economic levels and are best monetized through subscriptions. 2. Subscription vs. Recurring Revenue: A Critical Distinction. There’s a fundamental difference between recurring (predictable repeat billing) and reoccurring (periodic invoicing). True subscription models create 5-10x higher business valuations and require upfront payment, automation, and a membership mindset—not just monthly invoicing for the same service. 3. Nature of Work Trumps Scope of Work. Instead of selling defined scopes (hours, tasks, deliverables), professionals should sell nature of work (bookkeeper vs. controller vs. CFO; pair of hands vs. expert vs. collaborator). This shifts focus from transactional outputs to strategic relationships and enables premium subscription pricing. 4. The Billable Hour Persists Due to Inertia, Profitability, and Technology Gaps. Despite decades of criticism, hourly billing survives because: (1) it’s still profitable enough, (2) switching requires overcoming massive inertia, and (3) existing legal/accounting tech is built to optimize billable hours rather than enable alternative models. Bottom-up transformation (solo practitioners first) is more feasible than top-down. 5. AI Won’t Replace Human Expertise—It Will Enhance It. While AI can handle execution (like robotic surgery or document drafting), clients will still want human subject matter experts for consultation, strategy, and decision-making. The key is “prescription before diagnosis”—professionals must diagnose before prescribing solutions, and AI should augment rather than replace that consultative relationship. __________________________ Want your question to be answered on a future show? Fill out this short survey. Check out Threshold. Sign up for Paxton, my all-in-one AI legal assistant, helping me with legal research, analysis, drafting, and enhancing existing legal work product. Get Connected with SixFifty, a business and employment legal document automation tool. Sign up for Gavel, an automation platform for law firms. Visit Law Subscribed to subscribe to the weekly newsletter to listen from your web browser. Prefer monthly updates? Sign up for the Law Subscribed Monthly Digest on LinkedIn. Check out Mathew Kerbis’ law firm Subscription Attorney LLC. Want to use the subscription model for your law firm? Click here to sign up for a new platform that helps law firms use subscription billing. Get full access to Law Subscribed at www.lawsubscribed.com/subscribe