Full-Time

Business Development Consultant

Updated on 7/12/2026

Clio

Clio

1,001-5,000 employees

Cloud-based legal practice management software

Compensation Overview

£35.7k - £48.3k/yr

London, UK + 1 more

More locations: Manchester, UK

Hybrid

Category
Business & Strategy (1)
Required Skills
Salesforce

People at Clio

People at Clio who can refer or advise you

Requirements
  • Previous experience in a BDR/SDR role, ideally in B2B SaaS or technology sales with enterprise accounts
  • Proven success engaging senior decision-makers in complex, consultative sales cycles
  • Executive presence with the ability to confidently present to and influence sophisticated buyers
  • Strong business acumen and the ability to quickly understand complex challenges and map them to tailored solutions
  • Competitive mindset paired with intellectual curiosity about law, technology, and AI
  • Ability to translate technical concepts into clear, compelling narratives for non-technical audiences
  • Proficiency with Salesforce and other sales engagement tools
  • Demonstrate a keen interest in improving your craft by using AI
Responsibilities
  • Build revenue pipeline into enterprise target accounts within your assigned territory through a disciplined, multi-channel outreach strategy
  • Partner closely with Enterprise Account Executives to build pipeline, align on strategy, and set up high-quality product demonstrations
  • Create awareness of, and spark interest in, Clio’s product suite with key decision-makers
  • Develop a deep understanding of your assigned segment, uncovering unique business challenges and tailoring solutions that generate new opportunities
  • Sharpen your sales skills through ongoing training, coaching, and feedback loops
  • Stay agile and consultative in an evolving sales environment, adapting strategies to meet market demands
  • Understand prospects’ practice areas, technical requirements, and competitive landscape to effectively communicate Clio’s value proposition
  • Deliver consistent reporting on activity, pipeline progression, and results—both qualitative and quantitative
  • Ensure all prospecting activities are accurately documented in Salesforce and meet/exceed daily KPIs
Desired Qualifications
  • None

Clio provides legal practice management software that helps law firms run more efficiently. It offers two main products: Clio Grow, which improves client intake and engagement, and Clio Manage, which organizes tasks, manages cases, handles documents, and processes payments in one integrated platform. The software is cloud-based and sold on a subscription, giving firms from solo practitioners to large firms a centralized system for intake, matter management, document handling, and billing. Clio differentiates itself by providing two interconnected products tailored to legal work, a broad feature set for the full lifecycle of a case, and a platform used across a range of firm sizes. Its goal is to reduce administrative burdens and support the growth of legal practices by streamlining operations.

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

Series G

Total Funding

$2.2B

Headquarters

Burnaby, Canada

Founded

2008

People at Clio

People at Clio who can refer or advise you

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • AI adoption among Canadian lawyers supports higher-priced research and automation upsells.
  • Clio can cross-sell enterprise modules into its broad customer base.
  • Jurisage strengthens Canadian legal data coverage for Clio's AI products.

What critics are saying

  • Harvey and Legora are attacking Clio's AI and practice-management markets.
  • Anthropic's Claude for Legal weakens Clio's AI differentiation at the model layer.
  • Integrating vLex and Jurisage creates execution risk across products and datasets.

What makes Clio unique

  • Clio combines practice management with AI legal research after acquiring vLex.
  • Clio Operate targets enterprise firms with workflow orchestration for 200-plus users.
  • Clio serves over 1000 mid-sized and large law firms globally.

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Benefits

Company equity

401k

Parental leave options and stipend

Flexible paid time off

Stipend to support WFH

Various wellness benefitsand programs

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

3%

1 year growth

-2%

2 year growth

-1%
PR Newswire
Mar 9th, 2026
Clio launches Operate platform for large law firms at Legalweek New York

Clio has formally launched Clio Operate in North America at Legalweek New York, marking a significant expansion into the large law firm market. The platform, previously known as ShareDo and acquired by Clio in March 2025, provides legal workflow and operational orchestration capabilities for large and mid-sized firms. Clio Operate serves as a central operating system connecting best-of-breed technologies whilst offering native tools for legal workflows. The platform enables firms with over 200 users to manage complex operations across multiple offices and jurisdictions through a single interface. Firms using the platform have reported reclaiming up to two billable hours per day per fee earner, with fixed-fee practices reducing case lifecycles by up to 40%. The launch is part of Clio for Enterprise, a dedicated business unit focused on serving firms with hundreds or thousands of users.

Artificial Lawyer
Jan 6th, 2026
Legal tech raises $6B in 2025 as AI boom creates winners and losers

Legal tech funding reached $5.99 billion in 2025, with 14 rounds exceeding $100 million, according to Raymond Blyd, CEO of LegalComplex. The sector showed extraordinary valuations and strong revenue growth for some companies, though divisions emerged within the industry. Whilst top performers flourished, others struggled. Robin AI encountered funding difficulties, and dozens of legal tech companies that raised capital between 2020 and 2023 have failed to secure additional funding since then. The figures exclude debt financing by public legal tech companies such as Wolters Kluwer and capital raised by legal tech investment funds. The AI boom has created a stark divide between well-funded market leaders and struggling competitors unable to attract further investment.

Cision
Jun 30th, 2025
Clio Acquires vLex for $1 Billion

Clio has signed a definitive agreement to acquire vLex for $1 billion, paid in cash and stock. This acquisition marks a significant shift in legal technology by combining Clio's legal operating system with vLex's AI-powered legal intelligence platform. The merger aims to create a unified system that enhances legal research, practice management, and AI capabilities, empowering legal professionals to manage and execute legal work more efficiently.

LegalTechTalk
Jun 9th, 2025
Definely raises $30M Series B led by Revaia - LegalTechTalk

AI-powered legal tech company, Definely, has raised $30 million in Series B funding to accelerate its global expansion and AI product roadmap. The round includes investors from Europe and North America, and it is led by growth investor Revaia, alongside Alumni Ventures, Beacon Capital, and legal tech giant, Clio.

Artificial Lawyer
May 8th, 2025
The Consultant Model: Lawyers Are Doing It For Themselves

By Sarah Murphy, Clio.For decades, the path to success in the legal profession followed a predictable trajectory: join a firm as a trainee, progress to associate, and ultimately compete for the coveted partnership position. But a quiet revolution is underway – many lawyers are stepping away from conventional practice to embrace consultant roles.According to research by LexisNexis, this movement is gaining such momentum that by 2026, up to one-third of UK lawyers could be working under consultant arrangements rather than traditional employment models. The consultant pathway particularly appeals to mid-career and senior lawyers with a specialist practice area and an established client base.Importantly, the consultant model isn’t about working less – it’s about working differently. The rise of platform law firms that provide the necessary infrastructure and compliance frameworks alongside technological advances that enable remote work and efficient practice management facilitate this transformation.What’s driving the shift?Rigid hierarchies and inflexible working arrangements in traditional firms have fuelled dissatisfaction among experienced practitioners seeking greater autonomy. The COVID-19 pandemic dramatically accelerated this trend by normalising remote work. While only 4.7% of UK employees worked from home in 2019, a recent Forbes Advisor poll revealed that 63% of respondents now work full-time or part-time remotely.Recent return-to-office mandates have heightened tensions, while technological advancements and platform law firms have removed barriers to independent practice by providing essential infrastructure without the administrative burden of solo practice.Market consolidation through mergers and acquisitions has further contributed to this trend