Miami Beach-based Levantage AI Advisors has introduced an attorney-led consultancy to help small and midsize law firms adopt artificial intelligence strategically, prioritising governance and workflow integration over software procurement amidst ongoing industry adoption challenges.
Levantage AI Advisors has launched as an attorney-led consultancy aimed at helping small and midsize law firms adopt artificial intelligence with strategy, governance and workflow integration rather than by buying more software. According to the announcement by Levantage, the Miami Beach–based firm positions itself as software-agnostic, offering tailored roadmaps to evaluate where AI can responsibly add value across intake, document handling, client communication and internal operations. [1][3][4]
The firm says it was created in response to widespread frustration in the legal market with disconnected tools, low adoption rates and uncertainty around confidentiality, compliance and professional responsibility. Levantage emphasises ethical safeguards and practical implementation designed to fit each firm’s size, practice area and risk profile, and it explicitly does not sell proprietary software, instead acting as a strategic partner to help firms select and integrate third‑party tools. The company statement highlighted a focus on governance and workflow design over subscriptions or vendor hype. [1][2][3]
Ty Brown, described in the release as an attorney‑preneur and Brand Ambassador at Levantage AI Advisors, framed the offer around the demands on practising lawyers: “AI is no longer optional for law firms, but most attorneys don’t have the time or resources to experiment with dozens of tools or risk getting it wrong,” he said. Brown added: “Our goal is simple,” Brown added. “Help law firms reclaim time, reduce administrative burden, and stay competitive?without compromising trust, confidentiality, or professional judgment.” These remarks were included in the company announcement distributed on 3 January 2026. [1]
The launch speaks to a measurable gap between individual experimentation and firm‑level adoption. Industry surveys show most lawyers use AI tools individually but far fewer firms have implemented firm‑wide programmes: one survey found 85% of individual lawyers use AI weekly while only 21% of firms reported firm‑wide adoption, and another industry poll reported that while many organisations are evaluating AI uses, only around 20–43% report actual usage. Those figures underline the need for the kind of strategic, governance‑first service Levantage offers. [6][7]
Levantage’s service set, as described on its website, includes AI tool selection, content flow automation, CRM and case management integration, lead generation and ongoing training and optimisation. The company frames these offerings as ways to free staff and attorneys from administrative busywork and to improve client lifecycle management and case support while maintaining professional and ethical standards. The firm also stresses ongoing optimisation to keep legal teams current in a fast‑moving AI landscape. [3][5][4]
While the advisory model addresses legitimate market friction, editorial distance is warranted: the launch materials are company statements describing a market need and a proposed solution. Independent adoption will depend on firms’ willingness to invest in governance, change management and training rather than simply procuring tools. Industry data suggests the hardest challenge remains institutionalising AI at the firm level, not merely deploying point solutions. According to available survey data, strategic planning and governance are key to closing the gap between individual use and firm‑wide implementation. [1][6][7]
Levantage AI Advisors says it will serve small and midsize law firms nationwide from its Miami Beach base, offering customised roadmaps and implementation support intended to reduce wasted spend and prevent ethical missteps as firms bring AI into routine legal work. The company provided media contact details in its announcement for further enquiries. [1][3]
📌 Reference Map:
##Reference Map:
- [1] (PR Newswire / Levantage AI Advisors press release) – Paragraph 1, Paragraph 2, Paragraph 3, Paragraph 6, Paragraph 7
- [2] (PRWeb summary) – Paragraph 2
- [3] (Levantage.ai , home and solutions pages) – Paragraph 1, Paragraph 2, Paragraph 5, Paragraph 7
- [4] (Levantage.ai , about page) – Paragraph 1, Paragraph 5
- [5] (Levantage.ai , solutions page) – Paragraph 5
- [6] (AIQLabs blog on adoption trends) – Paragraph 4, Paragraph 6
- [7] (IADC survey summary) – Paragraph 4, Paragraph 6
Source: Noah Wire Services
Noah Fact Check Pro
The draft above was created using the information available at the time the story first
emerged. We’ve since applied our fact-checking process to the final narrative, based on the criteria listed
below. The results are intended to help you assess the credibility of the piece and highlight any areas that may
warrant further investigation.
Freshness check
Score:
10
Notes:
The narrative is fresh, with the earliest known publication date being 3 January 2026. The press release was distributed on that date, and the company’s website mentions a December 2025 update. ([levantage.ai](https://levantage.ai/?utm_source=openai))
Quotes check
Score:
10
Notes:
The quotes attributed to Ty Brown in the press release are unique to this publication, with no earlier matches found online. This suggests the content is original or exclusive.
Source reliability
Score:
8
Notes:
The narrative originates from a press release distributed via PRWeb, a reputable distribution service. Levantage AI Advisors’ official website provides additional context and information about the company. ([levantage.ai](https://levantage.ai/?utm_source=openai))
Plausability check
Score:
9
Notes:
The claims made in the narrative are plausible and align with current trends in AI adoption within the legal industry. The company’s focus on strategy, governance, and workflow integration without selling proprietary software is consistent with industry needs. The narrative is well-structured and free from excessive or off-topic details.
Overall assessment
Verdict (FAIL, OPEN, PASS): PASS
Confidence (LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH): HIGH
Summary:
The narrative is fresh, with no evidence of recycled content. The quotes are original, and the source is reliable. The claims are plausible and align with industry trends, with no signs of disinformation.

