At Docketly, we believe part of what sets us apart from the rest is our continual drive toward delivering superior court appearances — from finding our customers the best price possible via SuperBundling to leveraging AI to optimize our workflow, all of our teams are committed to this goal.

Part of delivering a superior court appearance includes showcasing the quality of attorneys we’re entrusting with your cases AND providing the data to back that up! This is referred to as the Outcomes Program.

This handbook page will provide customers with:


Background and Objective

The Outcomes Program grew out of a need and desire from both our customers and attorneys.

Customers have long requested visibility into the “return on appearance” they receive by using Docketly as quantifiable data showing what they paying for.

From the Attorney’s perspective, they have expressed interest in learning more about how they were performing compared to other attorneys and whether the customers are happy with the results they’ve achieved for them in court.

To deliver on the customers' requests and share import metrics back to attorneys, we built the Outcomes Program!

The overall objectives of the Outcomes Program are:


Grading Criteria

Every applicable hearing is assigned a score once the hearing report is published. As of 2025, the grading criteria only applied to Collections hearings, with plans to introduce criteria for other practice areas in the future.

A score is influenced by three key “phases” of a hearing and assigned (or “fired”) by the information included in the attorney’s Hearing Report. The three phases are:

  1. The pre-hearing & preparation

  2. The in-court appearance

  3. The fidelity of the return information in the Hearing Report

The Preparation phase includes the steps an attorney and customer take ahead of the hearing, such as:

The Appearance phase is pretty explanatory. In short, this phase evaluates whether the attorney appeared AND if they appeared in the Appearance Method indicated on the hearing details. Things like:

The Reporting phase is an assessment of the fidelity of which the attorney completed the hearing report — i.e.: did they answer the bare minimum of questions, did they upload any files back to the customer, etc?

How a Score is Calculated


Outcomes Dashboards

To view your firm’s Outcomes Dashboard, click on the Outcomes button on the left-hand menu within your Docketly account.

Filters

At the top of the dashboard, customers and attorneys can filter the dashboard’s data by:

Overall Comparison

Next, customers will see a side-by-side comparison of their outcomes vs. other firms based on the filters they’ve selected.

Positive Outcomes

The dashboard then moves to showcase a breakdown of the Positive outcomes, highlighting their top three results and trends over the last 6 months

Neutral Outcomes

Unlike the Positive Outcomes breakdown, the Neutral Outcomes section categorizes scores as:

Since a Neutral score is heavily nuanced and doesn’t often have a clear indicator, we found it beneficial to separate the results by whether something was inside one's control. Additionally, a Neutral score doesn’t mean the attorney returned a bad outcome — rather, this is typically an indication that:

Negative Outcomes

Returning to the previous form, the Negative Outcomes section breaks down a customer’s sources of negative outcomes and shares their top three areas of opportunity on the right hand.


Ongoing Work at Docketly

Returning to the beginning of this article, the Outcomes Program is a continually evolving element of Docketly and involves multiple teams.

To discuss the program in greater detail or learn how you can contribute, please reach out to the Success Team!