I think certain areas have ben made far more accessible, obviously the personal injury claims etc... but residential conveyancing has made a lot of use of advancing technology with email being used a lot, case management systems, online searches, Land Registry online, moves to e-conveyancing etc... It has speeded things up no end with so much being able to be done by email.
Similarly you have Money Claims online, Possession Claims online etc... making those kind of claims much simpler, especially for people to do themselves, especially for simpler claims, rather than going through a solicitor.
I understand there are a lot of online will services too and things like divorce can be done via online companies.
I'm surprised the advent of "Tesco Law" hasn't been more established already, where people can go in for simple general queries for cheaper fees etc...
I think that when Alternative Business Structures are more established then that could open the market up, just so long as it retains it's professional standards and regulation. I'd quite glad to see referral fees banned too and the moves to regulate the PI industry and certain money claims with structured set costs for legal representatives.
I think (hope anyway!) that the image of the old fashioned lawyer is diminishing - I've worked in a fair few law firms and been in many others though moreso being in the city.
I think commercial law is a bit different as many commercial lawyers form part of a business team so meetings are part of that, it's a different thing entirely really. I believe insurance based contracts are aroud for things like employment law so clients can pay installments to be on an insurance scheme for advice to a certain level.
I've done general and commercial work and a lot of my advice was done on the phone or electronically, I would do electronically as much as I could as it makes things far quicker and more efficient, especially now a lot of people can access email via their phones.
In one firm I worked at we ran a legal surgery I used to do a number of times a week. We used to get all kinds of issues though, quite a few of them not really legal ones.
I think it is hard to give virtual "quick fix" advice to any professional level virtually unless the relevant safeguards and such are in place and often you need quite a lot more information than is initially presented to be able to advise properly and more succintly without having to give all kinds of different possibilities if not straightforward. There are also regulatory issues such as proper instruction, ID requirements, compliance, letters of instruction including regulatory issues like complaints procedure etc...
To a certain extent I believe that, depending on the issue, you do get what you pay for.