A weekend workout
Holy moly I’m pooped.
Now that our daughter can crawl and almost walk, plus the weather is finally nice and warm, weekends have become a lot more active, shall we say.
Or in other words, chasing her around for 2 days straight. I’m sure the parents are laughing at me, and the non-parents are confused, but anyway, back to work.
Last week was hectic because I had a court appearance on Friday, in-person, which meant most of Friday was a write off (commuting there, appearance, commuting home, catching up on email, etc.), not to mention I spent some extra time on Wednesday and Thursday preparing for it.
I think it went about as well as it could have, keeping in mind that for family law court appearances that are called “conferences”, they are mainly to bring the parties together, in front of a judge, to try and negotiate. The judge doesn’t make any rulings unless both parties consent.
So we consented to some standard stuff, but nothing major came of it, so it was short and sweet.
Also had a bunch of other stuff, including but not limited to:
a planning call for a webinar I’ll be presenting this week helping family lawyers use AI in their practice
some demos and training calls for family and immigration law firms to show them our platforms
testing new features that are being released for both
managing my other files/clients
and more.
Everything seems to ebb and flow in entrepreneurship, and this feels like one of those busy times where everything is picking up at the same time.
But hey, it’s what we signed up for, right?
Have a great day,
Josh Schachnow
Canadian lawyer, CEO at Visto.ai
Who I can help:
If you’re trying to learn the basics of AI and how I’m able get way more done in less time, check out my course on how to build custom GPTs here;
Family law firms in Ontario looking to do financial disclosure in half the time, check out Scio here;
Immigration law firms in Canada looking to prepare immigration applications faster than ever before, check out Visto here;
Anyone with family law matters in Toronto (separation, divorce, etc.), or immigration matters in Canada, can hit “reply” to see if I can help.

