~ Akme means peak. We curate the climb.

Attorneys:
one CV, every format, every credential.


A living record of your legal career. Maintain a single source of truth for every bar admission, court admission, reported decision, publication, speaking engagement, and CLE credit. Export to your firm's biographic format, an expert-witness CV, or a judicial clerkship submission. Get email alerts before every CLE deadline.

7-day free trial. Cancel anytime during the trial and you are not charged.

~ The problem

You have four CVs. None of them agree.


  • The firm bio in your last partnership memo. Out of date.
  • The judicial clerkship CV your dean wants for next cycle. Two clerkships behind.
  • The expert-witness CV opposing counsel will deposition you on. Last touched a year ago.
  • The cross-state bar admission you forgot to renew last spring. Not on any calendar.

Every audience wants the same record in a different shape. MyAkme is the source of truth that produces all of them.

~ The system of record

One library. Every format. Zero re-keying.


One library

Every publication, license, certification, appointment, presentation, and accomplishment lives in one place. Edit once. Reflected everywhere.

Every format

Firm partner biographic format, expert-witness CV, judicial clerkship application, bar admission affidavit, modern PDF and DOCX.

Renewal alerts

Check the renewal-reminders box on each credential you want tracked. We email you 60, 30, and 7 days before the expiration date you entered.

~ Renewal alerts

The credentials that rarely give you a calendar invite.


Add any credential with an expiration date to your MyAkme library, check the renewal-reminders box, and we will email you 60, 30, and 7 days before the date you entered. Uncheck the box on any credential you do not want reminders for.

State bar admissionFederal court admissionCLE hoursSpecialty certification (e.g. NBLSC)Malpractice insuranceNotary commission

~ Ready when you are

Start the trial. Curate the climb.


7-day free trial. Cancel anytime during the trial and you are not charged.