Centurion Law Group flows with the trend
Centurion Law Group (Centurion)
(www.Centurionlg.com), a pan-African law conglomerate, now offers the cost
savings and efficiency of flexible legal services through its acquisition of
IMANI-African Lawyers On Demand http://IMANIlod.com/
Through Centurion Plus, a
division of Centurion, corporate clients throughout Africa can select from a
pool of approximately 190 carefully vetted, on-demand attorneys for temporary
and project-based legal services.
“Flexible legal services have
transformed the legal industry in the United States, Canada, Europe and regions
of Asia,” says NJ Ayuk, CEO of Centurion Law Group. “We’re confident that with
our massive capital investment in technology and human resources, it will be
equally successful in Africa. We are very bullish about this.
“This model provides African
businesses, state companies and corporate legal departments with an affordable
means of accessing top attorneys from around the Africa including the
diaspora,” Ayuk adds. “Flexible legal services also makes sense for foreign
investors looking to do business in Africa. Centurion Plus connects them with
attorneys who can help them navigate all of the tax, regulatory, litigation,
and local content requirements they’ll encounter here while keeping their
expenses under control.”
Centurion Plus attorneys have
full access to Centurion’s extensive suite of resources and connections. With
the firm’s significant leverage and reach, clients who choose on-demand
services in lieu of more traditional full-time legal representation are assured
of the same level of expertise that has come to signify Centurion Law Group.
Centurion has always
differentiated itself by the ability to get the deal done and being pan African
and pro African. Its growth strategy works well thanks to a strong
collaboration with international law firms from the United States of America,
the United Kingdom and Europe. The Africa market has changed so much that it
now offers work to its western counterparts where skills are lacking in Africa.
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