March 17, 2008

For Long Term Increases To Income, Partners Must Delegate Work

12:00 am

I spoke Friday at the ABA Techshow on profitability and the key drivers of partner income.  At the end, I posed some questions to the audience to facilitate discussion on the findings of the 2007 Law Firm Economic Survey.  One of the questions I asked was "why would firms have low associate utilization?"  A partner in the audience responded, "Partners don't trust them to do the work."

That is a common answer I hear from partners.   However, without fully utilized associates, firms can't leverage.  Leverage affects the growth of the firm and there was a strong correlation between leverage and income by respondents of the 2007 Survey.  The challenge for small to mid-size law firms is finding ways to increase associate utilization so that the firm positions itself to leverage.  If trust is an issue, then confront it.  Mentor associates so that you can trust them to do the work as you would.

An article written by Allison Wolf in her Lawyer Coach Blog titled The Fine Art Of Delegating was the basis of a post by Tom Collins in August, 2007 called Spinning Increases Law Firm Income.   Both Wolf and Collins stress that partners who aren't "spinning" work to associates need to face the reasons that prevent them from delegating - don't let the reasons be an obstacle. 

Wolf writes:

Delegation is one of the lawyer behaviors that need to be rewarded by compensation committees. For a law firm to be most profitable partners are required to spin work down to juniors. Savvy compensation committees look at the combination of billable hours and spin earnings when allocating partner income.

Collins adds:

[A] firm’s compensation plan is often the reason Why Partners Hoard Work. That, in turn, leads to poor leverage, underutilization of associates and high turnover.

On the issue of trust, Wolf writes:

Successful people surround themselves with talent. Your challenge is to help develop the juniors so that they do the work as well if not better than you do.

Formal mentoring programs are still rare in small and mid-size firms, yet the need is apparent based on the findings of the 2007 Survey and from what I hear from partners.  In a year where inflation may very well end up over 4%  (over 1% higher than the annual average the past 10 years), firms can't rely on rate increases alone to maintain income.  Develop programs to help associates manage more caseload.  Give partners an incentive to delegate and mentor.  Those who do will create the circumstances necessary to leverage and grow the firm, ultimately leading to sustainable increases to income.

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Filed under 2008 Tech Shows, ABA Techshow, Leverage, productivity by Brian J. Ritchey

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March 17, 2008
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