November 25, 2008

The Corporate Management Structure: Viable in the Legal industry?

12:34 pm

In a former career I consulted within the corporate world. There, the majority of companies used a management approach where levels of managers would have direct reports that would scale upwards to higher levels- essentially a vertical corporate structure. Although there has been a shift within many organizations to a “matrix” or “flat” horizontal platform, the structure of boss and direct report still exists at the core. Since I have been consulting for the legal industry I have seen similarities to the corporate structure, but there are some fundamental differences, and it has always struck me that there could be a better organizational structure within the legal industry that would provide the desirable attributes of accountability and developmental planning.

Almost every firm has department chairs or practice group leaders who are responsible for the management of that portion of the firm. In addition, the mentoring of associates is a big priority for most firms. But is it truly a boss/employee relationship?  Do law firms have “management teams.”? 

The idea of management teams within the legal industry is not a new idea, but it is one that has been tough to implement. In an ideal setting you would have one partner managing several associates, with responsibility for their utilization, development, and discipline. This way when an associate is underperforming there would be one partner to talk with, who should know all the ins and outs of what is taking place. That is not what we are seeing today. Generally you have an associate working on a multitude of partners’ matters. This creates various issues, among them multiple levels of discounting by responsible attorney, personality differences, and having to request additional work from multiple attorneys to meet billable hour targets. The last of these is the most troubling.

The Redwood Think Tank did a study that indicated that those associates who eventually make partner start out making or surpassing their billable hours target and continues with this trend until they are promoted. Conversely those associates that end up leaving the firm or managed out within the first 5 years start and continue not making their billable hours goal from the beginning. 

 

These facts are pretty powerful in addressing associate development, even after the first year. I am not sold that those associates who underperform are not getting the work solely because of a lack of effort or poor performance.  Perhaps it is because they were not placed in the proper environment, and perhaps having the right mentor could be the key to success. A mentor might not only provide the needed billable hours to meet goals, but also the legal and organizational knowledge to propel an associate down the partner track. The opposite is true for those associates who don’t have a sufficient mentor. Are firms losing qualified associates simply because of a substandard organizational structure?
 
A potentially better structure would be to have one partner feeding work and being responsible for the development of a specific group of associates. This structure might not work with many law firms, as originations and responsible hours vary by group/partner, but it does not mean that you cannot have a boss/direct report relationship. A system that allows the associate to request more work from the mentor, and the mentor using that request to go to other partners for more work if he/she does not have it available could create a more cohesive and development-friendly atmosphere.
 
Having a structure like this provides the ability to analyze data by mentoring partner to identify development gaps and fill them when needed. I am not suggesting that underperformance is always due to a lack of mentoring, I am simply suggesting having accountability by associate and partner so there are two points of contact.
 
The question remains how to make this feasible and cause a shift to the suggested structure. The first suggestion is robust time-keeping software that can break out and measure the performance of mentoring time as well as other non-billable activities.  The second, and more important suggestion, is that the performance of those associates whom a Partner is mentoring should be included within the partner compensation process. For most firms the focus for partner compensation continues to be billable hour generation and collections. The idea of assigning a portion of compensation has been quite subjective. If management teams are in place, and you truly measure the success of those teams, you end up assigning a number that can be benchmarked against other teams. Placing a quantitative value on mentoring and addressing it within partner compensation would be give this process the best chance to affect real change.
 
–Russ Haskin
 
Russ Haskin is Director of Consulting for Redwood Analytics/Lexis Nexis.
 

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November 30, 2008

Kurt Beasley @ 11:00 am

Hello - What a great source. Thank you for providing this resource. Question - it is time for my firm to bring on an additional attorney. I do not have a plan, partership etc., for earning equity and revenue sharing. do you have a sample that i could look at? Need a method of sharing income generated through my office.

Thanks again.

Kurt

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November 18, 2008

Alternatives to the Billable Hour

1:30 pm

For years, there has been much talk, and decidedly less action, on “alternatives to the billable hour.” GC’s say they want this, and firms say they are willing to provide these options, but neither side tends to “walk the walk” in a way that matches up with their stated intentions. We think there are a couple of key reasons for this:

1.       On the GC side, as much as companies are interested in reducing costs, there is little creativity or interest in crafting “win-win situations.” There is clarity in the billable hour, and with that model, less concern that firms will be leaving money on the table that ends up in law firms’ pockets.
 
2.       On the law firm side, firms quite simply have trouble managing to a fixed price or blended rate. It takes people skilled at active management and estimation, which only comes with experience. Firms often always lose money the first few times they try these types of arrangements, making them “gun shy” about doing it again.
 
The result of the above two issues is that the billable hour continues to dominate, despite its’ being a disincentive to efficiency on the firm side, and an inexact way of predicting legal expenses for clients.
 
In these less-than-robust economic times, both sides should take a harder look at the pricing models that exist currently for legal services. The most obvious issue, implicit in both of the above-stated problems, is one of trust, which is borne out of relationships and experience. As we all know, trust is a key component in the long-term success of any client/law firm engagement, and especially on one using a pricing model other than the billable hour.
 
On the law firm side, the more firms can accurately understand the value to the client they are providing for various types of work, the better they can accurately assess the appropriate work effort and the price the company is willing to pay. Over time, the combination of these 2 things can be used to accurately price the work profitably, based on staffing needs and their associated cost.
 
On the client side, the client has to understand that the law firm is a business too, and requires a margin on its work for it to desire to continue the long-term relationship. The greater the clarity into what the client bottom line is— whether total cost, expense predictability, outcome, or some combination—the better the firm can be at pricing the work in question.
 
There are many tools available to law firms (such as Redwood Analytics’ Matter Planning Tool) to help firms price out blended or hourly rates, with multiple scenarios and sensitivities. These are a key piece, from the firm side, of understanding how leverage and pricing affect profitability. However, it is the back-and-forth between the client and firm that ultimately has the biggest impact on alternative pricing arrangements. Firms must understand and respect clients’ priorities and their relative importance regarding legal services, and clients need visibility into firms’ bottom line as well.   This give-and-take, and both sides’ commitment to long term success of the relationship, will be what make alternative arrangements succeed. Given rate pressures, clients’ general dissatisfaction with legal services, and a more challenging economic environment, firms would do well to begin to engage their clients in these conversations, if they haven’t already done so.
 
–Bo Yancey
 
Bo Yancey is Director of Professional Services for Redwood Analytics/Lexis Nexis.

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November 11, 2008

Client Stages - A new way of looking at a client’s life cycle

3:59 pm

Inventory aging buckets are boring. Useful, yes, but still boring. Looking at how unbilled or uncollected hours have been spread over 30 day increments reminds me of learning to count by 2’s. There IS a business need for dissecting Inventory into manageable buckets, but that is for another post. Even before hours start to age, it is important to understand if we are growing the number of hours being worked. It’s simple. Look at this year, look at last year, do the math – better/worse. Right? 

At a basic level, yes. However, what if you take the concept of creating Inventory buckets and apply it to the growth in production over time? You would either create another collection of buckets (5%, 10%, etc.) OR you would have an entirely new perspective on the development of your client base.
 
At Redwood Analytics, we call this Client Stages.   These Stages allow us to analyze the client base in ways beyond a simple ranking of hours or growth rates. The basis for the Stages is the growth of the hours worked over the last 12 months (Rolling 12) compared to the 12 months prior (Prior Rolling 12). By using the last 24 months, independent of calendar years, we capture the growth from 2 full business cycles rather than a partial perspective such as year-to –date. Once the growths rates are calculated, the clients are categorized into the following lifecycle stages:
 
ACTIVE Work within the last 12 months
New & Renewed Work within the last 12 months, no work in previous 12 months
Thriving 100% growth in work vs. prior rolling 12 months
Growing

Between 20% and 100% growth in work over prior 12 months

Stable

Between -20% and 20% growth in work from prior 12 months
Declining Between -50% and -20% growth
At Risk More than 50% decline
 
 
INACTIVE No work in the last 12 months
Dormant             No work in the last 12 months, but work in previous 12
Lost No work in last 24 months
 
Having the client population dissected into these stages allows for much broader analytic review. Now rather than looking at the clients as a total pool, we can analyze them based on their lifecycle stage. Identifying clients who are declining or at risk of going dormant becomes easier and provides you with meaningful, decision-making information very quickly. If you are trying to determine where to spend client development dollars, focusing on strategic clients in some of the underperforming stages is a good place to start. 
 
The more that you can look at your client base from different angles, the more that opportunities will reveal themselves to you. Client stages are just the beginning of a forward looking view at your firm’s health—which in large part is based on its clients. Take some time and consider the value that could be gained from examining clients based on how long they’ve been with the firm; their ranking based on the revenue potential they bring to the table; or perhaps a rating system based on key metrics like realization, production, and cash cycle. Inventory aging buckets are useful from a billing & collections standpoint, but don’t limit yourself to one perspective of your firm’s lifeblood.  
 
–Jonathan Huyard
Jonathan Huyard is a senior consultant with Business of Law Services team for Redwood Analytics/LexisNexis.

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November 4, 2008

Heller in the Cellar

4:38 pm

I read this article on the downfall of Heller Ehrman with great interest. What this doesn’t say is that Heller was a firm who last year had profits per partner in excess of $1,000,000, and in 2004 was ranked 2nd on the American Lawyer’s A List.  The key takeaways are that weak leadership, and the resulting lack of direction and ability to make key decisions, doomed the firm.   The dissolution of the firm was brought to bear by lenders who called in loans when the firm’s partnership numbers dwindled below what was allowed in financial covenants.  In essence, a “bank run” ensued with partners leaving, which caused the banks to act.  (The current financial crisis likely did not help).

There are other firms who are similarly exposed, and while law firms generally don’t have a lot in the way of “retained earnings,” it does not mean that their financial health should not be scrutinized.  Fixed costs, equity partner contributions, and debt financing are all things that can bring about the end of a firm in challenging times if managed inappropriately.  As a managing partner at the conference I attended last week said, “lawyers often vote with their feet.”  That’s what happened here.  In my view, this shows the delicate balance firms must face in building consensus while still being able to make tough decisions.  Increasing profits year over year certainly helps. 

- Bo Yancey

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October 30, 2008

Law Firm Talent Management Doesn't Stop with Recruiting

2:57 pm

Without question, gaining an understanding of the characteristics of successful lawyers within individual firms can help firms to make wiser recruiting investments.  The “Moneyball” project worked on by Kerma Partners and Lexis Nexis’ Redwood Think Tank focused on the characteristics of lawyers before they entered the law firm studied.  Valuable information for the firm to have?  Certainly, if thoughtfully incorporated into a recruiting strategy.

However, recruiting the best candidates for success within a firm’s culture is only part of the story.  What’s the strategy to develop these associates after they are hired?   The most qualified new lawyer can be mismanaged (or unmanaged), whittling away at the likelihood of success.  The good news is that regardless of the candidate’s development before being hired, his/her development is largely within the control of the firm.
 
While the recent spotlight on analytics around recruiting efforts is very positive momentum, a firm really should not focus on a recruiting strategy without building a complementary development strategy.  Over the past year, the Think Tank has been studying what differentiates successful lawyers once they begin their careers.   In the handful of firms we’ve looked at, we have seen a (varying) correlation to success for attributes such as the type of exposure an associate receives, the clients they work with, and the volume of work they perform.   Look for an article summarizing these results in the near future.  As with the Moneyball conclusions, it will be important for firm managers to view information about the success of their own lawyers in the context of their own firm’s culture. 
 
I welcome feedback and ideas for attributes to test as we continue to apply real analytics to the issues surrounding talent management in law firms.
 

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October 29, 2008

Moneyball Indeed!

4:13 pm

Buzz abounds concerning the recent “Moneyball” project completed by the Redwood Think Tank and Kerma Partners.   A lot of the reaction seems to focus on trying to apply the results for a specific firm to the industry as whole.  This misses the point entirely. 

The basic premise of the study is that there is value in breaking away from recruitment as usual.  Spending millions of dollars to recruit the same small pool of candidates everyone else is targeting is not efficient.  Within the context of a broader set of talented, accomplished law students, traits should emerge from deeper study that allow firms a more focused approach.  Firms who develop the sort of self-awareness a study of this type creates have an opportunity to create substantial competitive advantage in their ability to attract the candidate lawyers (entry-level and lateral) best suited to long term success in and for the firm.  On the flip side, retention rates (and the cost of associate attrition) should be dramatically reduced. 
 
With regard to the question about the application of these conclusions industry-wide, there are a number of important points to draw.  First, a sample size of 1 is far from telling.  In fact, I would expect to find a number of firms for whom the conclusions drawn would be exactly opposite of those for this first firm.  Of course, this is not to say that interesting trends won’t emerge as the study is expanded; they will.  Which ones, however, will only become clear with a greater sampling.  Secondly, and I believe most importantly, the point of the exercise is to not really one of knowing which candidates will make the most successful lawyers generally but specifically, in the context of the firm’s culture, business and experience.  This point cannot be overstressed.  Yes, we may find that some traits can be correlated with expected success in the profession.  That said, any particular firm may find this trait to be unimportant in its context or even negatively correlated.  The power of the Moneyball study resides its law firm specificity. 

-Norm Mullock

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September 9, 2008

Why the Year End Collection Push is Not a Best Practice

9:38 am

 It is that time of year again, at least for the early starters, when the legal industry begins its preparations for the year end collection push. The push has become an industry standard and buzz word over time. Each year countless hours are put into collecting massive amounts of receivables every December in order to meet targeted numbers. Although it is a foregone conclusion that there will be a year end push for most law firms, is this really a best practice? 

The “ideal” approach with respect to legal industry inventory management is to have a continual billing and collections push year round, so everyone can enjoy the holiday season without worrying about making a budgeted target for collections. Although ideal, given the history of the industry, this is unfortunately a practice that will take time to implement.  Even if that happens, the remains of the year end push might still have legs. For most firms both lawyers and, more importantly, their clients are used to and expect a year end push. It is a behavioral pattern that is established and therefore not going away anytime soon. That said there are negative ramifications to such a practice and a few firms have recognized this and smoothed out their collection pattern.

Client Behavior

The first obvious detriment to a year end collection push is the impact on client behavior. If clients expect a year end collection push then they are less apt to pay within a consistent, timely manner. Some clients even have said to relationship attorneys who have tried to smooth out the process, “Why pay now if I know you are just going to look for more in December.” In fairness to the client I would probably hold on until December as well. For example, if my mortgage company let me pay all of my mortgage payments in December, I would do so - which brings me to my next detriment of the push, the Time Value of Money impact.

Time Value of Money

A dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow, so everyday a firm does not collect on a receivable they are foregoing the opportunity of re-investment. In my previous mortgage company example, I would take all of the money I owe the mortgage company invest it in some sort of portfolio that would give me a return on that money which would go straight to my pocket instead of the mortgage company. That is the same thing that occurs with the year end collection push within the legal industry: Investment income is left on the table as receivables age.

Aging Inventory

The next 2 problems are more internally focused within each firm. Not only can the collections push can have a negative impact on client behavior, it can as well with attorneys . A colleague of mine wrote a blog back in June on “Valuing your Firm’s Inventory” which I encourage everyone to read as it outlines how, as receivables age, the likelihood of realizing the original amount of those receivables diminishes. Since attorneys also exhibit the behavior of letting work age before it is billed, and billings age before they are collected, the probability of billing or collecting the original work/bill amount goes down.
Other obvious detriments include the ability to know where you are to your budgeted numbers as the year goes along, and how to budget for next year given a lack of information on your collections; a final drawback of the year end collection push is the impact on the age of your inventory. In the graph below, you can see three years worth of inventory pushes. There is a significant drop in balance each December (as depicted in the bar graph), but you can also see a spike in the age of inventory. Why does this occur? 
I ask many of the firms I work with and they almost always point to the answer: At year end, with pressure to make budgeted goals, most of the collection effort is on receivables that firms know they can collect and are more recent in nature. Therefore, the older inventory that has been aging over the years continues to get older and may get to a point where it is completely uncollectable. This is an unfortunate side effect of the collection push and one that should be accounted for in any inventory management strategy.
Although I have gone over many reasons why the year end collection push is not a best practice, I am not blind to the fact that it is not easy to make a quick switch to a continual inventory management process. So given that the “ideal” practice is not a readily accessible current option, are there things firms can do to prepare and approach the year end billing and collection push to try to maximize its result while working on the before mentioned strategy shift ? The first suggestion is start billing early –nothing earth shattering. With most firms you see an upward trend in periodic billings in October and November. That trend should start in the 3rd quarter, and those firms that have a more gradual collection slope in the last few months also have an increased slope in billings from August until November. The easy explanation to this is that billing is a more controllable portion of the inventory cycle than its counterpart. In the example below, you can see such steep a slope in each of the prior 2 year end pushes where as in the last year that billing was much more gradual and steady as the end of the year approached.
The natural benefit is that by getting the built up WIP out the door in a timely manner will give you the ability to focus on collections for a longer period. 
The firms that I have worked with who have had the most success with respect to WIP management are those that have some stipulation on billing in a timely manner when it comes to their partner compensation. Knowing that many firms cannot simply switch their compensation system on a dime, this type of action is not widespread, but it is a proven method. Each firm has seen an improvement in inventory management when a portion of partner compensation has been tied to that driver. “Compensation” in this regard can be defined as a direct input into the partner compensation equation or, alternately, can equate to monetary “fines” for late billing and/or collections.
It may be inevitable within current industry conditions that December will be the month with the most collections.   Again, it is in the best interest of the firm to change the status quo and begin collecting earlier and in a timely manner. Not only will you be able to have a better idea of where you will stand to budget sooner, but it will set your firm up for budgeting the next year. Still, if focus can be put on opportunity balances (those that have aged past an expected pay time) early in the process it may help avoid the side effect of the ever aging inventory. Those older balances can have the focus early on and perhaps generate collections while in December the focus can shift to the more readily available receivables.
I certainly hope that as time goes along the year end collection push will lose its luster as a buzz word and be replaced with continual inventory management. At the end of the year the firms that take this to heart just may see increased realizations, additional investment income, and perhaps most importantly a little more piece of mind that you are on target and can enjoy the holiday season.
-          Posted by Russ Haskin

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September 4, 2008

Associate Salary Increases & Firm Margins

10:20 am

It should come as no surprise to anyone that the most recent wave of associate salary increases have helped to erode law firm profit margins. Whether the wave begins in west coast technology firms, or east coast financial capital firms, its effects are felt beyond big law in the mid-size and regional firms headquartered in the mid-west and southeast. And, with 80% of law firm expense tied up in compensation and occupancy, the impact can be devastating. What is more surprising is the response of law firm leaders in this new economic environment. Reactions run the gamut from slash and burn tactics to taking it on the chin and silently watching margins erode. Formulating a balanced strategy and resisting the urge for an emotional response is critical. Consider the following.

 

First, is increasing associate salaries is an appropriate response to increased competition for the best talent in your market or just a follow the leader reaction?   Associate salary increases typically begin in markets where competition is fierce for not only attracting the best talent, but also keeping that talent as the reality of billable hours requirements hits home.   Increasingly, associates are not willing to trade work life balance for a big paycheck. This attitude is not pigeonholed in the bottom half of the law school classes, but pervades throughout. Are there other work life benefits your firm can offer to entice top talent? 
Secondly, recent surveys suggest the demand for legal services have declined in the first two quarters of 2008, and making sure your lawyers are properly utilized is essential to maintaining profitability. As margins become slimmer, there is no room for unproductive associates taking up space. But are associates really the problem? Most associates have little control over the projects they are assigned and virtually no ability to generate new business. They, like everyone else in the firm, rely on the rainmakers to generate enough billable hours to support the business. Before taking a defensive posture and eliminating positions, look for ways to improve your business development efforts. Are you effectively cross-selling your services to existing clients? Do you place enough emphasis on developing new business and in the right sectors?
Lastly, in today’s competitive marketplace, passing increased costs on to your clients is rarely an option. Even in big law, where clients were thought to be less price sensitive, general counsels are scoffing at increased rates as a result of higher associate salaries. Can you blame them? That doesn’t mean you have lost the ability to control your average rates.   The next time someone asks you for an alternative billing arrangement, consider the request an opportunity to control your own destiny. Look for ways to strengthen the value proposition, improve practice management at the matter level, and increase leverage.
Can you avoid the impact of associate salary increases? Not likely. But focusing on the positive economic aspects of your business, rather than going on the defensive, may help you roll through the downturn and leave you prepared for the eventual upswing.

- Rick Rawls

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September 1, 2008

Management Report Do’s and Don’ts

10:21 am

I was recently asked to speak at a conference on the topic of management reports and how firms are using them to help run their businesses.  It is a topic that I have been fortunate enough to gain a lot of insight into over the years.  Often I am handed a stack of reports and asked to help the firm automate them or to come up with a package of reports to use as their “reporting package”.  Most firms spend a lot of time and resources building their reports to look a certain way but spend little thought into the way that they are used and the actions they expect them to drive.

Any firm can generate data, but to be able to use this data to help model, analyze, and improve their business the firm must approach reporting with a more consistent process.  Currently, I see many firms looking at information that could be best described as “interesting”.  Interesting information is not the same as useful information.  In order to take full advantage of the information available to them a firm must:

• Understand the business drivers of a law firm
• Identify what is controllable
• Establish reasonable goals and relevant metrics

Once the proper mindset has been established and goals have been set, the law firm can move forward with building a set of reports that identifies the best opportunities to reach these targets.  The most important part of developing these reports is to keep them focused on the specific drivers of the goals and not get lost in the “noise” of the data.  A common misconception is that having more data available improves the management process.  In fact, the danger of information overload is just as great (or greater) of a problem as not having enough data or the wrong data.  As Jack Trout says in his book Trout on Strategy, “Knowledge is power only if you can separate the important from the billions of data swirling around you”.

In the end, reports need to be catalysts for action.  Reports by themselves do not make any difference in performance of a firm, rather they should serve to initiate improvement.  By setting up a plan from the outset and then setting up reports to manage towards that plan the firm will become more efficient and consistent in their approach.  Reports do not need to be complex to be useful, but they do need to speak directly to the questions being asked, providing clear direction quickly and succinctly. 

- by Derek Schutz

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Management Report Do’s and Don’ts

10:15 am

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