Full-Time

Senior Product Manager

Confirmed live in the last 24 hours

Clio

Clio

1,001-5,000 employees

Legal practice management software provider

Compensation Overview

€89.3k - €120.7k/yr

Senior

London, UK + 1 more

More locations: Dublin, Ireland

Hybrid

Local Clions are expected to be in the office a minimum of 2 days per week.

Category
Product Management
Product
Required Skills
Product Management
Data Analysis
Requirements
  • 4-5 years of experience in product management
  • Proven track record of independently taking multiple products or features from ideation to launch
  • Experience building or managing multilingual applications and/or internationalization projects, and expanding products to other countries and languages
  • Exceptional attention to detail, ensuring that no requirement or specification gets overlooked in the product development cycle
  • Experience localizing features for new geographies, languages, or personas
  • Outstanding organizational skills, capable of managing multiple priorities and tasks simultaneously without compromising quality or timelines
  • Experience using data to inform decisions without succumbing to analysis paralysis
  • Genuine ability to put yourself in our customers’ shoes and operate from a place of empathy
  • A significant number of failures under your belt, the learnings of which you can bring to Clio
  • Ability to work in a highly collaborative team without ego
  • Excellent communication and interpersonal skills
  • Have the ability to foster strong relationships with stakeholders at all levels within the organization
Responsibilities
  • Develop a roadmap in conjunction with your peers that moves our business forward and evangelize this throughout the company
  • Own the delivery of features in the roadmap while also ensuring they deliver on the desired business outcome
  • Drive customer and market research, identify opportunities, develop unbiased business cases, and determine priorities that help Clio best deliver on our mission and against our annual OKRs
  • Build conviction in the initiatives that you choose to invest in and be willing to pivot when priorities change or new information comes to light
  • Constant communication with customers, (existing, churned and prospect) as well as a deep understanding of the markets in which we operate will be expected
  • Use deep quantitative data to complete the customer picture
Desired Qualifications
  • Speak multiple languages Fluently
  • Have prior experience in the legal tech industry or a strong understanding of the legal services market, including familiarity with legal practice management software and the needs of legal professionals
  • Worked previously in a regulated industry or with multi-product ecosystems
  • Successfully launched products in global markets
  • Have a track record of breaking down objectives into initiatives and delivering to customers at scale
  • Demonstrable experience self-serving answers, insights and data from a variety of data analytics tools

Clio provides legal practice management software that helps law firms operate more efficiently. Its two main products, Clio Grow and Clio Manage, serve different purposes: Clio Grow enhances the client intake process and engagement, while Clio Manage allows firms to organize tasks, manage cases, handle documents, and process payments in one platform. Clio caters to a diverse clientele, from solo practitioners to large firms, and operates on a subscription model, charging users monthly or annually for access to its software. The goal of Clio is to improve the efficiency of legal practices, reduce administrative tasks, and support their growth.

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

Series F

Total Funding

$1.3B

Headquarters

Burnaby, Canada

Founded

2008

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Clio's $1.23B Series-F round boosts AI capabilities and international expansion.
  • The rise of the consultant model offers Clio opportunities to support independent practitioners.
  • Clio's web-based tools align with the growing demand for remote work solutions.

What critics are saying

  • Integration challenges from vLex acquisition could disrupt Clio's operations and customer satisfaction.
  • AI-powered competitors like Definely pose a threat to Clio's market share.
  • Staying private may limit Clio's access to capital compared to public competitors.

What makes Clio unique

  • Clio offers a comprehensive suite for legal practice management and client collaboration.
  • Clio's acquisition of vLex enhances its AI capabilities in legal research and intelligence.
  • Clio's products, Clio Grow and Clio Manage, streamline client intake and case management.

Help us improve and share your feedback! Did you find this helpful?

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

0%

1 year growth

0%

2 year growth

-1%
Newswire
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.

Legal Tech Talk
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

Legal Technology
Apr 1st, 2025
Legalweek 2025: Demos And Analysis Of Deepjudge, Vincent Ai, Thomson Reuters Cocounsel, Lexisnexis Protégé And More

By Neil CameronLegalWeek 2025 brought together some of the most innovative legal technology vendors, showcasing groundbreaking advancements in AI, automation, and data security.AdvertisementAs I wandered round I kept my eyes open for things that managed to grab my attention, here are some of those things.Legal Research & AnalysisDeepJudge were demonstrating their impressive AI-powered document search and analysis tools that can be used across a law firm’s entire corpus of data. Their context-aware NLP-driven technology facilitates untrained lawyers to retrieve and interpret complex case materials with a high degree of granularity and accuracy.AdvertisementI was particularly impressed with their NCLC AI Workflow development tool, which enables firms to produce complex AI applications based on a series of linked Workflow objects in a unique drag-and-drop environment.Orson Welles will have to rethink the famous speech from the top of the Ferris Wheel in The Third Man – the Swiss are now responsible for developing something much more exciting than the Cuckoo Clock.Alexi showed its AI-assisted legal research platform, providing speedy case law analysis and predictive insights. Others on the stand appeared impressed by its ability to streamline legal reasoning and produce relevant legal arguments.Wolters Kluwer continued to fly the European flag vying with the large US-based legal publishers with their multi-jurisdiction AI-based research system. The demonstration searches, however, were all pre-defined, and I was a bit disappointed that I wasn’t allowed to suggest my own searches.vLex Vincent AI Law demonstrated its AI-enhanced legal research and citation verification capabilities. I tried out a few different utilities; one was the analysis of a complaint which extracted and analysed a series of claims, proposed a defence to each claim as well as drafted a questionnaire of factual questions to ask the client about each claim.We then tried a standard 2nd Amendment query I’ve been using to compare different research tools – hoping that one day one of these AI research tools will criticise the Supreme Court’s various rulings – Heller (2008) and McDonald v. City of Chicago (2010) – which decided that the prefatory clause (“A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State”) does not in any way circumvent the operative clause (“the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed”) against all common sense

BetaKit
Mar 13th, 2025
Clio Acquires Uk-Based Sharedo To Move Into Serving Large Law Firms

BC legaltech company says its largest acquisition accelerates roadmap by “five years or more.”