Why Time Miner Pays for Itself in the First MonthLaw firms often hesitate to invest in new software, worried about whether the return will justify the expense. But when it comes to Time Miner, the math is simple: most firms recover more lost revenue in the first month than the cost of the subscription itself.
The Hidden Cost of Missed Time
Studies consistently show that lawyers lose 20-30% of their billable time every month. Short calls, quick texts, and brief emails rarely get recorded. For a firm billing $250 per hour, even just three missed hours a month equals $750 in lost revenue.
Compare that to Time Miner’s monthly cost $49.99 per user and the return becomes obvious.
How Time Miner Recovers Revenue
Time Miner integrates with the tools attorneys already use, like RingCentral, Dialpad, Outlook, Gmail, Clio, and MyCase. It works retroactively, scanning past calls, texts, and emails to generate accurate time entries. That means the work you’ve already done often forgotten or underbilled gets logged and billed fairly.
In just a few days, attorneys typically discover dozens of missed entries. By the end of the first billing cycle, the recovered revenue far exceeds the subscription fee.
More Than Just ROI
The value of Time Miner isn’t only in the dollars it recovers:
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Transparency - Clients see detailed invoices that reflect every call and message.
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Efficiency - Lawyers focus on practicing law, not chasing timers.
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Consistency - The entire firm benefits from standardized, accurate time tracking.
Real-World Example
An attorney billing $300 per hour misses, on average, 5 hours of untracked calls and emails in a month. That’s $1,500 of lost revenue. With Time Miner, those hours are captured and billed turning a $49.99 investment into more than a 30x return in just one month.
The Long-Term Payoff
Month after month, Time Miner continues to capture the small but valuable interactions that would otherwise slip away. Over a year, firms can recover tens of thousands of dollars in lost billable time, all from a tool that pays for itself almost immediately.
Final Thought
Time Miner isn’t an expense it’s a revenue multiplier. With its ability to capture missed hours, streamline billing, and boost client confidence, most firms find that it pays for itself in the very first month and then keeps paying dividends every month after.