Qualified intake, not cold leads
You need claimants who already fit your matter, show up with notice and breach proof organized on their phone, and actually finish your mobile intake without your team re-keying the same fields. Oyster routes that traffic with auditable attribution, takes nothing from your client's award, and charges you a flat B2B fee only when intake is attributed.
Why firms work with Oyster
Generic lead gen sends cold clicks. Oyster sends people who already matched a matter on their phone—often with notice fragments, breach context from HIBP, and filing details saved locally. That means less junk for your intake team, fewer abandoned mobile forms, and less paralegal time re-entering the same fields.
We can co-design mobile intake so evidence uploads cleanly into your stack. Attribution is generic and auditable; the product is open source. Consumers hear the same story you do: firms pay Oyster for qualified routing—not a cut of their check.
What claimants arrive with
Six capabilities that show up in partner conversations and in the app today.
Gmail discovery stays on the phone
When a user connects Gmail, settlement and notice signals are scanned on device—not uploaded to an Oyster inbox archive. Your intake sees people who already matched a matter locally and chose to continue.
Evidence saved for upload to your CRM
Notice IDs, receipt-style attachments, and filing fragments can live on the user's phone until they upload into your intake. That cuts re-keying and back-and-forth email compared with cold web leads.
Authoritative breach matching (HIBP)
Optional data-breach discovery checks against Have I Been Pwned using anonymized hashing—so users understand why a matter may apply before they reach your form, without Oyster storing raw email in a claims cloud.
Mobile handoff that finishes
We autofill what we can locally and open your intake in a mobile WebView. Fewer abandonments than desktop PDFs or login walls on a phone—less paralegal time fixing typos at the top of the funnel.
Attribution you can reconcile
We open your published intake URLs as-is—no marketing query params unless you explicitly authorize them. Outbound clicks are tallied internally (source, matter, destination host) with no PII. Core routing code is open source on GitHub if compliance wants to verify.
Economics aligned with your client
Oyster takes 0% of consumer recovery. Firms pay a flat B2B marketing fee on attributed intake. We disclose that plainly to users, which lifts trust on high-stakes arbitration matters.
Book a partner call
Use the scheduling button on this page to walk through your docket, intake volume, and mobile form optimization. Email founder@oysterclaim.com if you prefer to start there.
FAQ for firms
What is Oyster for law firms?
Oyster is an open-source consumer utility that routes qualified claimants to partner intake—especially data-breach and mass-arbitration programs. Claimants arrive after on-device discovery, with evidence organized locally—not from bought lists or opaque ad pixels.
Does Oyster take a cut of the client's recovery?
No. Oyster takes 0% of consumer payout. Partner firms pay Oyster a flat B2B referral fee for attributed intake—not from the victim's award.
How does Gmail discovery work for intake quality?
Gmail OAuth and settlement-oriented scanning run in the local app. Oyster does not operate a centralized email archive. Users who reach your intake have already surfaced notice-style signals on their own device and opted into the path.
How does breach discovery work?
When enabled, Oyster checks breach exposure through Have I Been Pwned (HIBP) using anonymized hashing—not by selling or uploading address books. That helps users self-qualify for data-breach matters before they land on your form.
What does Oyster handle vs. the firm?
Oyster handles discovery, trust UX, local evidence prep, and mobile-friendly handoff to your intake URL. Your firm owns legal advice, eligibility review, case acceptance, and representation.
Oyster is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Account safety (individual lawsuits).