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August 30, 2004

From Bauhaus to Your House

Novelists questioned about how they write, and more specifically about how they come up with their plots, sometimes respond to the effect that, "The characters took on a life of their own; they told me what they were going to do next."

I occasionally have the same feeling, albeit on a far less exalted plane, analyzing a specific aspect of the mammoth landscape of "the economics of law firms."  This article, in particular, thinks it's about new "open plan" designs for law firm offices:  Architecture which, rather than stringing identical offices down long corridors, punctuated by conference rooms, secretarial pods, and perhaps a depressing and banal lunchroom, features more open work areas, coffee/espresso or snack stations designed to encourage mingling, "hot desks," ubiquitous WiFi availability, a wider array of large and small conference rooms and war rooms, and a generally non-traditional layout.

First, to the merits of the new design mentality:  Few propose depriving lawyers of conventional offices altogether, but rather to make them smaller (too small to hold a meeting) and to devote a relatively greater proportion of floor space to common areas.  Lawyers actually work collaboratively more than they may realize, and this only serves that reality.  Technology is also a driver:  Documents and files are—or should be!—stored on centralized servers, so they are equally available everywhere.  Cost, last but not least, is reduced with this type of "build-out." 

[On a personal note, I can report that my wife's ad agency recently moved from conventional offices in the Chrysler Building to new "loft-like," open-plan space in the garment district, and her office went from a spacious and prime corner to a 6' x 10' windowless cookie-cutter. She loved it, as did practically everyone else.]

The merits of this design philosophy, then, I leave to your judgment in light of the idiosyncrasies of your firm and the relevant egos.

By far the most interesting point, however, is how the very use of space by law firms is changing, in two key ways:

  • When firms move, they almost invariably grossly under-estimate the amount of growth they will experience, and space they will need, over the life of the new lease. If the move was undertaken to consolidate scattered or inconveniently-contiguous departments, then, it will be a failure at least on that score.
  • The ratio of support:professional personnel, now in the neighborhood of 1:1, will decline and perhaps will decline drastically if back-office functions are outsourced across the globe or across the river. This in turn implies that you cannot intelligently design your new space without asking what the nature of all of your practice-support and other "invisible" functions will look like by the end of the new lease term.

In other words, an article that started out being about glorified interior design ended up being about the most challenging "what next" analysis.

Your office space is, to be sure, the visual distillation of your brand, your identity, and your character; but none of those elements is entirely static.  So should your space not be.

August 29, 2004

What's Wrong with a One-Company Town?

What's the biggest challenge for a Washington, DC-based firm that wants to grow?  The lack of any meaningful transactional practice in their own backyard.  To be sure, regulatory, antitrust, and litigation work are strong, but a claim to national, much less international, status is an empty one without serious corporate throw-weight.

The options, then, for breaking out of the DC sandbox are few:

  • merge with a national, or at least a New York or California, corporate power-house (this was the Wilmer-Cutler/Hale & Dorr strategy, slightly exceptional only because Hale & Dorr was a Boston-based tech heavyweight rather than a Bay Area tech heavyweight);
  • grow a transactional practice organically from within, primarily by opening branch offices where such work can actually be found (the Hogan & Hartson model); or
  • admit that governmental relations, regulatory and antitrust work, are your "core competence" and open up in Brussels, headquarters of the EU (Arnold & Porter).

Interestingly, while the Americans have had some success establishing beach-heads in Brussels, the Brits have by and large been forced to retreat after mounting forays into DC.  The article doesn't speculate on why that may be, but a possible reason, and one that stays away from invidious comparisons about entrepreneurial competence, is simply that Brussels is a new and relatively open playing field, whereas Washington is a mature and well-populated market with no self-evident need for new entrants.

The need, however, to break out of the one-company town of Washington, appears pressing to some firms:  Although DC-based firms' revenue was up 8% on average over last year, the AmLaw 100 as a whole were up 10%—with the inevitable arithmetic implication that non-DC-based firms' revenue rose even more.

August 27, 2004

One in Twelve of your Brethren at Risk?

Will 8% of all lawyer jobs be "outsourced" by 2015?  So Forrester Research would have it.  GE's inhouse department claims to have already saved $2-million by putting eight lawyers and nine paralegals in Gurgaon, India.  So the (financial) handwriting is on the wall; is this occasion for hand-wringing about the coming impoverishment of the profession, or for celebration about another triumph of innovation?

Neither.  To begin with (unlike the ur-outsourcing example of call centers, for instance), the vast majority of what lawyers do fails both tests of a task susceptible to outsourcing.  Those two tests are:

  • that the task be ultimately reducible to a set of rules, a grand flow-chart, if you will; and
  • that it need not be performed face-to-face.

The second test will save all our waiters and hairdressers, police and firemen, doctors and nurses, teachers and hardhats; the first test will save all our "knowledge workers."  To be sure, as GE demonstrates, some "lawyerly" activities—massive document reviews, drafting boilerplate, low-risk agreements—can and should be outsourced.  Not only are they intellectually unsatisfying, they are not tremendously remunerative.  (This apes my instinctive comeback to politicians pandering to laid-off textile mill workers with promises of subsidies or trade barriers:  "So, let me understand, your dream for your children is that they can grow up and go to work in a textile mill?")

More intriguing than the question of low-on-the-foodchain inhouse work being farmed out is whether there's to be a role for outsourcing in law firms themselves.

A far more thoughtful, and comprehensive, piece is provided by a Hildebrandt partner writing in Legal Week.  He provides the requisite background and overview of the attractions and demerits of outsourcing, follows with a virtual checklist of what an Executive Director would want to analyze in reaching a go/no-go outsourcing decision, and points out that the benefits include not just cost-saving, but flexibility, quality-for-money, and 24/7 operational capability.

So outsourcing is here to stay, and here to grow.  We see yet another example of David Ricardo's (1772--1823) principle of comparative advantage, and the benefits of trade and specializing in what one does best.  Stanislaw Ulam once challenged Paul Samuelson to name a single principle in economics that was both true and non-trivial, and after some thought, Samuelson responded with Ricardo's theory: 

"That it is logically true need not be argued before a mathematician; that it is not trivial is attested by the thousands of important and intelligent men who have never been able to grasp the doctrine for themselves or to believe it after it was explained to them."

The good news is that outsourcing the mundane lets you focus on the exciting, intensive, high-value practice of law.  Or, as the Hildebrandt partner puts it, the greatest risk is in facing the outsourcing challenge and doing nothing.

August 25, 2004

Healthcare Insurance Costs? Maybe You Don't Care

Sexy it's not, unless where the $$ is bleeding off without much chance of controlling it gets your attention, but this McKinsey piece addresses controlling health-care benefit costs (albeit in the context of F500 companies). 

When I was a junior in college majoring in economics, I did one of my two requisite "junior papers" on the challenge of runaway healthcare costs, and the potential remedy embodied in a new form of healthcare service provider called an HMO, then pioneered only by Kaiser Permanente of California.  At that time, healthcare absorbed an unimaginable 8% of GDP.  Today it's nearing 15% with no visible ceiling in sight.  [The economic reasons are manifold, but two will do for now:  (1)  Realistically, demand is driven by individuals {as opposed to, say, the state} and given that premise, demand is insatiable, in that there is no such thing as an individual having "too much healthcare" or being "too healthy."  (2)  The economic perturbations caused by the third-party-payer healthcare insurance system are, perhaps, the single worst cause of healthcare economics' bizarre dysfunction.]

Be that as it may, McKinsey has no magic bullet (who does?), but suggests that one start from a very straightforward premise:  What do employees really value in terms of healthcare benefits, and what tradeoffs can be made?  In the end, of course, law firms may find all of what McKinsey has to say to an F500 firm irrelevant.  I'm reminded of a friend who, shortly after starting in a senior business-side position at an AmLaw 50 firm, said she'd floated an initiative to save money in a particular support area, and the response was, "Who cares about saving money?"

Hey, if you are in that position, you should have skipped this post.  But having read this far, we should talk; I want to do an (anonymous) piece or two about your firm's success.

August 24, 2004

A Taxonomy of KM and its Taxonomies

Remember when Knowledge Management was new and sexy, about ten years ago?  This professor of information management does; barely five years ago he wrote about 20 CKO's in the Sloan Business School magazine, and now few of those positions still exist.  What went wrong, if anything?

First, he posits that KM has gone through a few stages, from an initial exalted position as a strategic resource (a "source of innovation"), to an ill-defined middle period where a grab-bag of tools were employed (some amounting to old training wine in new KM bottles), to the last, perhaps current, era of intranets, portals, and search.  Yet to this day, defining what KM actually is—or even what "knowledge" actually is—remains elusive.

Given this chequered history, our professor adopts a pragmatic approach.  Rather than trying to distill the metaphysical essence of KM, he claims to have empirically categorized seven species of KM, each best-suited to its own ecological business niche:

  • "Systems:"  Knowledge is codified in databases (Xerox uses this for its maintenance workers)
  • "Cartogarphic:"  Directories and maps guide the inquisitive to experts (Bain's "People Finder")
  • "Engineering:"  Exposing users to processes (HP's product and competitive information databases)
  • "Commercial:"  Identifying a company's patents and other IP assets in an effort to maximize profitability (Dow Chemical, IBM)
  • "Organizational:"  Attempting to put people with similar interests in touch through formal and informal knowledge networks (Shell, BP)
  • "Spatial:"  Kind of like "organizational" only relying more on physical architecture of offices than IT (British Airways' new headquarters, any self-respecting ad agency), and
  • "Strategic" (yes, again):  Where the organization conceives of itself as in the business of creating and selling knowledge (Johnson + Johnson, Unilever, any self-respecting law firm)

So where does this taxonomy leave us? 

The helpful part is that our good professor has provided a framework for thinking about which way(s) of deploying KM are best suited to the way lawyers already work.  Adapting KM to lawyers works far better than the converse.  The main part of the message, however, may be that the best KM deployments are the ones that become invisible.  If we conceive of KM as analogous to professional ethics or quality control, the lightbulb goes on:  Everyone, and no one, is responsible.  Maybe that's why those 20 CKO's are no longer around:  Not that they failed, but they succeeded.

August 23, 2004

"There is No Place for the Computer in the Home"

Although this Hildebrandt article dates back to 2000, its premise that law firms of the future will migrate to the model of having full-fledged CEO's as business leaders strikes me as visionary then and almost palpably the direction in which the world is headed today.

This migration will be driven by the one irresistible outside force:  Clients.  How so?  I've repeatedly said that the biggest single complaint clients have is that lawyers don't really understand their business.  I'm beginning to believe this is a structural problem with the legal profession, and not merely a universally-repeated failure of training or diligence on behalf of lawyers.

By "structural" I mean that the qualities that make for the creme de la creme of the legal profession—extraordinary thoroughness, a focus on spotting all the issues, exhaustive research, a high degree of risk aversion, an utter inability to risk being wrong—are pretty much a short catalog of all the qualities a successful businessperson will not embody.  What then, would having a "CEO" at the head of a law firm do to fix this, or at least to paper it over attractively?

Primarily, it means that donning the mantel of CEO and living its mission permits, nay requires, one to learn business.  To stop "thinking like a lawyer" and to start thinking audaciously.  To truly be able to walk in your client's shoes.  And for those lawyers who reply, with marvelous internal inconsistency, that their firm will never have a CEO because: (a) they're not about to give up any control; and (b) having a CEO would make no difference anyway, the answer lies in the story of DEC and Ken Olsen, its CEO in 1977 who uttered the immortal words titling this post.  Where would DEC be today if he had envisioned a place for the computer in the home?  Two guys named Steve Jobs and Bill Gates were having precisely that thought.

August 21, 2004

Tell Us What You're Going to Do

When the latest edition of Corporate Counsel magazine landed in my mailbox last week, I had the perverse impulse to tear out and focus on the major law firm ads to see if there were any common threads.

Unfortunately, there were.

One was the pervasiveness of two metaphors:

  • sports:  an Olympic sprinter, the Baseball Hall of Fame, more Olympic medals, a yacht race, a race-car steering wheel, and a dog show; and
  • wilderness and the great outdoors: the open ocean, a lone mountaineer on a deserted peak, an ancient explorer's map of the world, a white owl in snowdrifts.

Now, understand:  Ads need strong visuals as much as they need strong copy, but the competitive challenges these firms implicitly promise to help their clients solve will be resolved in conference rooms, not behind the wheel of an ocean-going yacht.  Visuals, as copy, must speak to the reality of what firms offer.

Yes, then there's the copy:  Tag-lines and promises such as:

  • "Legal insight.  Business instinct."
  • "The Advantage of Focus"
  • "The Mark of a Legend"
  • "Business Needs Champions"
  • "[We] Know the Territory"
  • etc.

I do not cite these happily or with a knowing smirk in mind—to the contrary.  I cite them for the same reason this Booz-Allen partner critiques the Bush and Kerry presidential-campaign ads:  They are "propaganda," and not authentic.  His advice to the two candidates:  "Just tell us what you're going to do.  Then we'll vote."

Law firm marketing cannot exactly be based on "tell[ing] us what you're going to do," but it can be based on telling us what you have done—with case studies, client "success stories," or simple statistics and awards.  And, it can be based on what you know, which is, after all, what you have to sell.

So should slogans and sports or wilderness visuals never be employed?  I won't say never, but I will say never if they're the beginning, middle, and end of the pitch.

August 20, 2004

"I Understood Everything Except 'Debt' and 'Equity'"

Everyone has had the, "If only I knew then what I know now..." thought, so here's an article I commend highly to any junior associates who may be out there in the audience.

What do senior partners want from you?

  • ask questions; don't assume
  • have the courage to say, "I don't know; I'll get back to you on that"
  • just as the first draft of a client letter or a brief will not be perfect, don't imagine you can walk into a partner's office to make an oral presentation without rehearsing
  • bullet-proof your work in terms of typos, solecisms, and incomplete research
  • take on as much as you can handle, but if something is going to be late, let the partner know as far in advance as possible
  • find a mentor
  • and last, be creative and be a contributor; just doing what you're asked is not enough.

I would add:  If you discover early on that you're not cut out either for the law in general or for the practice area you're in (I, for one, was an unhappy litigator but a delighted securities/corporate guy), don't be afraid to face up to it, cut your losses, and re-boot your career.  This takes more courage than nearly any other professional challenge you'll face (it's tantamount to admitting failure, or at least poor judgment), but if you're not passionate about what you're doing others will leave you far far in their wake.  Do it, the earlier the better.

And another thing:  Bone up on debt vs. equity.

August 18, 2004

It's Post-9/11: Where's Your Business Continuity Plan?

Disaster management and crisis recovery are ugly topics, but in the post-9/11 world, not-dealing with them is not an option. 

[Full disclosure, as they say in journalism circles, before they typically disclose something utterly trivial and profoundly beside the point:  I was a securities lawyer with a large investment bank/broker-dealer for nearly 10 years whose offices were primarily in the South Tower of the WTC; although I had left the firm before 9/11, on that day I lost one abnormally courageous and far-sighted friend, who had predicted another attack (I was there for the first one in 1993), the firm's head of security, an Aussie and a Vietnam Vet, and a "bloody-hell" down to earth fellow.  His fatal mistake?  He stayed behind to make sure everyone was getting out.  For the record, the firm lost only two other people.]

On to the topic at hand, then:  We have moved from the era of "disaster recovery" to the era of "business continuity."  In other words, it's not whether your critical files are backed up, it's whether your firm can continue to function and serve its clients.  This is a more complex endeavor.  Why is this important?  The obvious reasons are:

  • Moral:  You have a duty to your partners, employees, and clients;
  • Physical:  Your firm is entrusted not just with data but with confidences, with plans, with, if you're good, dreams--safeguard these; and
  • Conceptual:  Senior management has, as part of their mandate, an obligation to undertake a serious examination of "risk management," and today that includes, alas, terrorism.

Perhaps the most astute insight from this article about these issues is this question:  How will senior management think on their feet in the face of a huge, and by hypothesis unforeseen, disruption to the business?  If the instinct is to adopt "business as usual" mind-sets, patterns of behavior, and methods of communication, the disaster will be amplified.  The more unfamiliar and threatening the reality, the more our instincts drive us to take comfort in the familiar.

Resist the impulse.

August 17, 2004

IT & Productivity: Does It Matter?

Continuing the debate about the strategic value of IT, The McKinsey Quarterly weighs in with a piece surveying research conducted with the London School of Economics that chalks up improved productivity to better management, period, end of story—without regard to IT investment.  The methodology was to rank 100 companies on a scale of 0 to 5 on three criteria:  (a) lean manufacturing [not relevant to law firms, but a proxy for lean operations]; (b) performance management, which sets clear goals and rewards people who advance them [extremely relevant]; and (c) talent management, which "attracts and develops high-caliber people" [need I say, extremely relevant].

McKinsey found that a one-point improvement on this 0-5 scale measuring "total factor productivity" (an unfortunate term from microeconomics meaning, essentially, the efficiency of capital and labor inputs) was worth a 25% increase in headcount:  In other words, raising your score by 20% on these criteria gives you a productivity boost equal to being 25% larger--without the overhead, training, headaches, etc., involved in an expansion of that scale.

By contrast, the total factor productivity of companies in the top quartile of IT deployment, vs. those in the bottom quartiler, was 4%, with zero impact on profitability.

Bottom Line:  Manage, manage, manage; and deploy IT while you're at it, of course.

August 16, 2004

Is "Strategic IT" Over?

Can IT no longer confer a competitive advantage?

According to the well-publicized writings of Nicholas Carr, it no longer can.  Whereas American Airlines' famous SABRE reservation system provided a true, and enduring, competitive advantage decades ago (and is still the subject of business school case-studies, as I can personally attest), Professor Carr argues that today's technology—Cisco routers, Dell PC's, even IBM services—are standardized commodities for sale to all comers.  In such an environment, it no longer pays to be cutting edge; indeed, the very concept of "cutting edge" becomes questionable.

Rather, CEO's and CIO's need to be realistic about the changed nature of the IT beast, and specifically:

  1. Focus on "good enough."
  2. Drive hard bargains (a commodity industry is often one with excess capacity, and excess capacity typically implies tremendous flexibility in pricing at the margin).
  3. Don't be creative; shun proprietary systems.
  4. Challenge ROI numbers.

This last point deserves elaboration:  One should, of course, always challenge ROI numbers, but I think Prof. Carr's point is slightly more nuanced—at least mine would be.  To wit, one can no longer assume when investing in a "commodity" that cost savings will flow through unimpeded to the bottom line.  That may be true for a day or a week or a month, but your competitors will soon adopt the same commodity cost-savings strategy, and you will no longer enjoy the "savings"—your customers will, through lower prices.

Which is, after all, exactly what Adam Smith would have predicted.

August 14, 2004

Partnership Compensation: "Disequilibrium" Rules

Lockstep, modified-lockstep, lockstep with pay for performance, or pure "eat what you kill?"

This is an issue which has not, to say the least, achieved equilibrium.  "Equilibrium" in economics means something akin to what "climax phase" means in ecology:  The status towards which all disequilibrium states or transitional phases will evolve, assuming no external shocks.  For example, the "climax phase" of the ecology of the Adirondacks is old-growth mixed deciduous and evergreen forest.  A forest fire would drastically alter that ecology, but again, assuming no further external shocks (development, acid rain), it would eventually return to old-growth forest.

That digression aside, my hypothesis for what the equilibrium state of the partnership compensation model will be, is:

  • Modified Lockstep

This is a very large topic, and a wonderfully dispassionate, broad, and distinctly smart piece about it is from Asian Legal Business.  Among its points:

  • UK-based firms have been relatively slow to embrace any non-lockstep models, and their profitability per partner has suffered as a result.  Indeed, ALB chalks up the withdrawal of the noteworthy firm Denton Wilde Saptes from Asia to this syndrome.
  • The UK/US philosophical-remuneration divide also, per ALB (and several other equally or better-informed sources) scotched Ashurst's merger discussions first with Latham & Watkins and later, more notoriously, with Fried-Frank.
  • Lockstep, when it works, can be a beautiful thing, eliminating internal discord and focusing a firm outwards.
  • But/And, Lockstep, when it does not work, can be stifling to innovation, can permit deadwood to survive, and can motivate high-performers to jump ship.

So why do I predict "Modified Lockstep" will inherit the earth?  Although none of the extant partner-remuneration models is perfect (otherwise every firm would have glommed on to that model), I think this is, all things equal, the optimal model:

  • Reasonable, but not distorting (a la CEO stock options) incentives are maintained;
  • Firm-wide unity is essentially maintained;
  • For international firms, flexibility across regions and profit-centers is maintained;
  • Slackers are discouraged, and ultimately eliminated; and last, and my favorite:
  • Firms that have adopted it seem to be increasing their global market share at a convincing rate.

Q.E.D.?  Not quite yet, but I hope to put together some empirical evidence on this.

Posted by Bruce at 8:40 PM | Permalink | Printer-friendly version | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Location, Location, Location

Is geography destiny?  It is if you believe that Philadelphia is "the worst legal market" in the country.  Sandwiched between New York and Washington, DC, without indigenous investment or commercial banks of any size, and with a high-taxation, business-hostile climate, its AmLaw 200 member firms' profits per partner ($431,000) pale besides the comparable firms headquartered in New York ($1.37-million), Washington ($846,000), and Boston ($697,000).

In a somewhat opaque digression, the article implies that the five "growth happy" firms (+49% in headcount over the past 5 years) have adopted the wrong strategy, since their PPP is up 42% over the same period, while the more conservative firms (+21% in five-year headcount) have seen their PPP grow 52%.  Although tempting, I'm reserving judgment (the "Scottish verdict," of "not proven").  Too small a sample size over arguably a very anomalous five year period.  Conclusions such as this can only be legitimized across more firms and longer periods.

To be sure, there are some local industry opportunities, including pharmaceuticals, biotech, and a bit of financial services, but it's clear the Philadelphia legal community is on the defensive in reaction to this article.  The most common line of attack is that Morgan-Lewis and Dechert, two highly profitable firms with Philadelphia roots, were classified as "national" rather than "Philadelphia"-based, thus depriving Philadelphia of a pair of nice upward-skewing profits per partner numbers. 

As for Morgan Lewis, I think the "national" moniker is fair.  New York, Philadelphia, and Washington each have "more than 250 [Morgan-Lewis] lawyers" according to the firm's website, so it's hard to say the center of gravity remains on the Schuylkill.  As for Dechert, that's a closer call:  There, the lawyer headcounts are 247 (Phila.), 102 (NYC), and 59 (DC).  To be sure, Dechert aspires to the "national" categorization (their website bold-faces, "international," in fact), and I think the "national" characterization is fair:  They do total over 700 lawyers across 17 offices.

Bottom line:  Counting Morgan-Lewis and Dechert as "non-" Philadelphia is certainly fair.

Not fair—indeed positively laughable—is the counterattck that "Skadden, Wachtel, and Cravath" should not be deemed New York firms.  Wachtel, let it be stated for the record, has one office in the world:  Here.  Cravath has two:  Here, and London.  Skadden is the only semi-marginal case, a truly international firm.  But their psychic, financial, and business center-of-gravity is hard in Times Square.

The question remains what a Philadelphia firm aspiring to more should do.  My suggestion:  An intra-city merger.  Bulk up, proceed to cost-cut and slim down, and get some people's attention.  After that, one could always be acquired....

August 13, 2004

Blindingly Obvious (To Those Who Would See)

Reed Smith is launching what is, so far as I know, the first of its kind collaborative partnership with the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania.  Called "Reed Smith University" (RSU), the program is a customized "executive education" effort which will bring about 30 Reed-Smith practice managers, office managing partners, and other firm leaders to the Wharton campus each May for an intensive one-week immersion in courses covering leadership, business development, professional support, technology, and law.

Wharton has a reputation for tailoring similar executive education programs for the usual F100 suspects including Merck, Coca-Cola, Microsoft, and IBM, but according to a Wharton spokesperson, this is the first time a law firm has done it.

John F. Smith, III, a partner at Reed-Smith's Philadelphia office, will serve as the first RSU "Chancellor," coordinating between Wharton and the Reed-Smith partnership and helping design and fine-tune the curriculum.  While grades will not be awarded, independent contractors will evaluate the program's overall impact with a view to highlighting what works and what doesn't.

My reaction?  Nearly awe-struck at the vision of Reed-Smith to undertake this venture.  You've heard me say it before, but conceptually nothing differentiates AmLaw 100 firms as businesses from similarly sized corporations, and the time for truly professionalized management has long since arrived.  As Lynn Phillips, head of Wharton's executive education program, put it:

"I just think it shows the growing need for business development and management skills in the legal profession. I think this shows that Reed Smith recognizes how businesses are oriented today and they want to make sure that its top talent has this perspective."
The start of a trend?  It is devoutly to be wished.

August 11, 2004

Your Sexy Tax Department

Tax advice as a secret weapon in beauty contests is a neglected strategy, according to this UK tax solicitor.  Of interest is her take that your tax department should be more than a transaction support function—an unexciting backwater full of competent drones—and should instead be viewed as adding an ingredient of "alchemy" to a new-client pitch, in the form of:  "Hire us and the tax-efficient strategy we've devised for this transaction will save you $X."  (And consider setting a portion of your fee to be a percentage of $X, something CPA's have been doing for a long time.)

What keeps firms from doing this?  The obvious cultural reason is that tax departments are not traditionally seen as glamorous new-business drivers, but as soon as one recognizes that few things are more "glamorous" to a corporate CFO than hard dollar savings, that attitude begins to soften.

The more tactical reason is that tax advice is typically sought after a the nature and structure of a transaction is fairly well set:  At which point optimally tax-efficient strategies may have already been unwittingly precluded.

But the tax department will never in and of itself drive new business wins, right?  Well, consider incentive compensation schemes, which are all about tax issues:  And what grabs senior management's attention more compellingly than that? 

Gossip Time-Out

For the first time, the inimitable Vault site solicited partners', not just associates', opinions for its annual "Most Prestigious Firms" ranking.  Here we go:

  1. Cravath
  2. Wachtel
  3. Sullivan & Cromwell
  4. Davis-Polk
  5. Skadden

...etc.  Once again, in a victory for the home team, eight of the top 10 are NYC-based (#7 Williams & Connolly and #9 Latham being the exceptions), as are 16 of the top 25.

Meanwhile, Legal Week posed a different question to its UK base:  How do you see the global legal marketplace ten years hence?

Despite a very rocky past couple of years, Clifford-Chance was judged most likely to be the premier UK-based international player (41%), beating out Freshfields (29%) and Allen & Overy (12%).  Will the leading global firm be?:  UK-based (7%);  US-based (44%); "half and half" [in the Azores, perhaps?] (49%).

My votes?  I have very little quibble with the "most prestigious" rankings (kind of like debating whether Jeter or A-Rod adds more to the Yankees), and I think the 7%-UK/44%-US split of the Legal Week poll means the handwriting is on the wall.

Back to work....

August 10, 2004

SOX Section 404 & "Utterly Futile Box Ticking"

Sarbanes-Oxley §404 continues to sow a wide swath of worry and denunciation virtually world-wide.  From a UK perspective, the requirements are seen as American "imperialism" and the value of a US-exchange listing is increasingly being called into question.  Firms that already have experience with the US "exporting" its legal requirements (with, for example, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act) are perhaps more ready to call into question the value of SOX compliance.  For a large multinational firm with innumerable transactions across the globe, §404 compliance, far from providing tangible "good governance" benefits, is seen as "utterly futile box ticking."

Meanwhile, on this side of the pond, firms are struggling mightily to get their arms around records management.  Many, to be sure, have paper record policies and procedures in place, but as for electronic records?  Don't even ask:  According to this poll, 5 out of 6 respondents have zero confidence they could uncover record-retention violations.

Partly this is for simple lack of training:  60% of firms report they do none whatsoever.  But the fundamental problem is having the wrong people at the table when electronic record-retention review policies are being considered:  Two-thirds do not include a lawyer.  In light of that, the poll results are no surprise.

August 9, 2004

"The Law Breeds Immature Business People"

At least according to the Financial Times, in an article about the difficulty of crossing the chasm from senior associate to rain-making partner.  In part the difficulty is a familiar one and one we've rehearsed before:  Lawyers are simply not trained in client development.  Certainly not associates (quelle horreur!) and not, with the rarest of exceptions, partners either.  Not-training associates in rainmaking actually has a strong economic logic to it, so I will eschew the temptation merely to chalk it up to the aristocratic world-view of the partnership or other pseudo sociocultural rationalizations.

The economic logic is simple:  Senior associates who develop a loyal book of business are in a vastly superior bargaining position vis-a-vis their firm than their client-less peers.  They can, without boasting, let it be known they could take their business elsewhere if they aren't anointed partners.  (In the immortal words of Shoeless Joe Jackson, "it ain't braggin' if you can do it.")  No rational firm would encourage this, so expect the quo to be status in terms of associate training.

On the other hand, not-training partners is simply self-defeating, and at last some baby steps are being taken to offer coaching and guidance.  This is, indeed, a cultural question ("real lawyers aren't touts"), as evidenced by US firms being markedly better at it than UK firms.  But when one's rank of full-equity partner depends in the long run on client development, the motivation to learn is sharp. 

August 8, 2004

Time for a Corporate CIO?

Are law firm IT departments maturing to the point where they are coming to resemble corporate IT departments?  According to a Baker-Robbins consultant, that time is nigh.

The issues that corporations confront include:

  • service level agreements
  • outsourcing
  • storage management
  • disaster recovery, and
  • more sophisticated services including client relationship management (CRM) and enterprise resource planning (ERP).

For those heading up a multi-office firm's IT operations, this is worth a read.  (Yes, the author has a vested interest; but that also means he's well-positioned to understand the territory.  Caveat emptor.)

August 6, 2004

A General Counsel for the Counsellors?

Does a law firm need a General Counsel?  While the notion of piling lawyers on top of lawyers may seem counterintuitive, let's step back and play one of my favorite thought experiments:  What (if anything) in the nature of a law firm as a business differentiates it in some critical way from a normal for-profit corporation operating on a similar scale and scope?

UK-based firms are increasingly asking themselves this question and here in New York, Shearman & Sterling has just appointed its first General Counsel:  John Shutkin, who comes from 16 years at KPMG International as its G.C.  What will keep him busy?  Conflicts (internal and external), risk management and insurance, firm governance and compliance, and the inevitable litigation and HR issues.  Shearman & Sterling has, wisely I believe, chosen not to make Shutkin an equity partner, so his compensation will not be tied to the firm's financial performance.

According to a recent Altman-Weill survey, nearly two-thirds of the top 200 US firms have a designated General Counsel, although it's typically a lawyer with a full practice as well who advises part-time; and of the one-third without such a formal arrangement, many plan to designate someone in the next year.  As the world regulatory environment continues down the road to ever-increasing complexity, a full-time G.C. makes sense; lawyers shouldn't have to stay current on every new governance wrinkle any more than should corporate executives running similar-sized businesses.  It really is "someone else's job."

August 5, 2004

Growth for Growth's Sake

One of the more remarkable implications of Microsoft's recent announcement to return $32-billion to shareholders in a one-time special dividend later this year was its sub silentio admission that it didn't have any better ideas about what to do with the money.  From the perspectives of both financial theory and corporate governance, this is an almost shockingly lucid and correct decision.

Nevertheless, the business press was full of woeful stories to the effect that the Mighty Microsoft, growth company par excellence practically as far back as the attention-span-challenged investor can see, was now "mature," a depressing and humiliating come-down.  Employees would desert and the new hiring pool would consist only of mediocrities:  The rusting, decrepit hulk of a once-upon-a-time Titan was given its last rites.

Now, I'll take second place to no one in my faith in "growth" as the economic cure-all, but that's on a macro level and even Microsoft is just one company.  Sometimes growth as a strategy per se is not optimal, particularly when it tempts one to make long-shot investments (or to overpay for sure-shot investments, which comes down to the same thing).

As Exhibit A I offer you Holland & Knight, at least if this law.com article is to be believed.  The firm wants to acquire another 100 lawyers to add to its 30-lawyer San Francisco presence.  And why exactly?  Well, because "we've got to grow depth and breadth...to be able to sell to our clients that we are a truly national law firm."  One might ask if the landscape of "truly national law firm[s]" is unoccupied territory awaiting a land grab, but I digress.

The real point is that growth appears to be being pursued as an end in itself.  As a consultant puts it, "Some firms [are] not making a lot more money, but they're scared not to grow.  So they keep on growing."  What would Bill Gates say?

August 4, 2004

What if the AmLaw 100 Were Managed Like the Fortune 100?

Can we all agree that "leadership" is an indispensable ingredient that can separate the truly exceptional firms from the wannabes?  Yes, thank you.  Now, can we define "leadership?"  I for one cannot, but I usually turn to my favorite troika of wise men on this topic (among many others) for insights and "ah-ha!" observations:  Warren Bennis, Peter Drucker, and David Maister.

One belief about leadership which they share is that leaders can be, if not exactly "made," then cultivated, trained, developed, and nurtured:  If there is essentially no raw material to be worked with, developing a leader is a lost cause.  But given two more or less equally intelligent, talented, personable, and ambitious 20-something's, the one who works in a firm that takes professional development seriously will be a far more effective (and popular) leader 30 years later than the one who goes into  a sink-or-swim environment.

The stages in ascending the ladder from leading one person—oneself—through cultivating professional self-discipline and motivation, to leading an entire firm with a combination of cultural stewardship and inspirational vision, are nicely described here.  "Growing Leaders 101," if you will.  By itself the article is scarcely groundbreaking, but that is precisely why I bring it to your attention.  Simply put, it is alien thinking to most law firms to propose they embark on leadership development.

Contrast this deep assumption of the profession—that leaders will naturally emerge from the rocky soil of the associate ranks, without cultivation or fertilization—with the approach McKinsey, Goldman-Sachs, or Procter & Gamble take to developing young talent.  Now compare the perceived talent and professionalism of the senior managerial ranks of those firms with that of comparably pre-eminent law firms.   The difference is not, in short, an accident.

August 2, 2004

US vs. UK: What's Going On Here?

This thought has been brewing for awhile, but since I find triumphalism—and even gloating—rather loathsome, I have kept it out of these pages.  Until now.

The thought is:  US-based firms have out-maneuvered their UK-based counterparts in staking out a serious presence on the other guys' home turf.  To be precise, the footprint of US-based firms in London specifically and Europe generally is far vaster than the footprint of UK-based in New York specifically and the domestic US generally.

To discerning observers of the market, this is not news; it only becomes news when a pithy article sums up the frustrations of the Magic Circle and contrasts it with the recent coup of Milbank on their home turf.

So there: We've said it.  Now to the far more interesting questions:

  • Q.:  Are there systemic differences in how US- and UK-based firms approach overseas expansion.  A.:  There must be (tautologically said).
  • Q.:  Are those differences cultural, financial, or both?  A.:  Almost to a certainty, both (still in the realm of the tautological).
  • Q.:  How can we describe, and what accounts for the origin of, those differences?  A.:  Now it's getting interesting; stay tuned.

August 1, 2004

A Sexy Lateral on the Prowl?

Heard rumors that a practice group or a specific lateral partner at a competitor is sniffing the wind with thoughts of moving?  Does it sound like an opportunity to pick up some expertise or strengthen a franchise?

According to Gerald Roche, the uber-recruiter now semi-emeritus at Heidrick & Struggles, you'd best think again.  The happy, productive, valued partners are not sending recruiters resumes or quietly testing the waters.  "And is it the happy ones you should be most interested in?  'Yes, without question.'"

Even if you're not looking laterally, read it to learn how compensation is not the motivator and how understanding someone "metaphysically" is critical.

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