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Made For Law/Docs

Documentation

Everything you need to set up, embed, and manage Made For Law legal tools for your practice.

These docs are written for law firms, agencies, and technical teams implementing Made For Law as a SaaS calculator platform. Start here if you need the installation path, account setup sequence, lead capture behavior, billing controls, or developer reference before a calculator goes live on a firm website. The documentation explains product behavior and configuration. It does not replace legal review of any calculator result, disclaimer, intake question, or client communication.

For quick answers, visit help. For platform connections, see integrations.

Quick Start Guide
Go from sign-up to your first embedded calculator in 5 minutes.

How to use these docs

If you are installing an embed

Read Getting Started first, then Embedding. Confirm your domain license, copy the current script snippet from the portal, paste it into the target page, and test the calculator in a private browser window. If the iframe does not load, the troubleshooting section covers domain authorization, script placement, blocked third-party scripts, and cache issues.

If you manage intake and leads

Read Lead Capture, Branding, and Integrations together. Those sections explain which fields visitors see, where submitted lead data appears, how notifications and CRM handoffs work, and which settings affect visitor-facing copy. Check the privacy and disclaimer language before publishing changes on a live law firm site.

If you are a developer

Use Developer Reference for API shapes, webhook behavior, and license activation details. Treat examples as product implementation guidance, not legal authority. When integrating with firm systems, avoid logging sensitive intake details in client-side analytics, support tickets, or browser console output.

If a result looks unexpected

Save the calculator name, state, county if applicable, inputs, and timestamp before contacting support. Made For Law can investigate product behavior and data mapping, but attorneys remain responsible for legal judgment, client advice, and filings prepared from any estimate.