What belongs in the command center
Legal work becomes harder when documents, dates, correspondence, court events, evidence, and tasks are split across folders, email, notes, and memory. The command center should make the operating picture visible.
Records
Key documents, filings, orders, evidence items, and notes should be organized by case context.
Activity
Recent actions should be visible so people can understand what changed and when.
Next steps
Tasks, missing items, due dates, and review checkpoints should be surfaced clearly.
Preparation
Hearing, meeting, filing, and review preparation should be connected to source material.
Why it matters
Case organization is not cosmetic. Fragmented information creates confusion, delay, repeated work, and avoidable risk.