Lawpalooza - The Summer Tour!

It's been an interesting and busy summer, which is why I haven't had time to post to the blog recently.  The traffic stats nevertheless demonstrate that readership is increasing, as are offline comments and suggested topics.  All commentary is welcome and encouraged. Here are some recent and upcoming events where you can hear me discuss some of my favorite topics:

 

Bottom Line Marketing: 2009 and Beyond

Webinar, August 11, 2009, 1:00-2:30 PM ET

The dramatic economic downturn has affected law firms and their clients in  equal measure and has rocked the legal market landscape.  One of the results will be a change in how law firms develop new business and interact with clients in the future.  In April, Altman Weil conducted a study of law firm leaders that focused on key areas of transition, including clients and marketing.  This 90-minute webinar will draw on that data, as well as Altman Weil's hands-on experience  to provide practical business development tactics that will generate business for your law firm.

 

Benchmarking in a Changing Economy

International Legal Technology Associatioon

Panel discussion, August 24, 2009, 10:30 AM ET

With the challenging economy, what was already a competitive market has now become even more competitive and strategic. We look at how the benchmarking concept has changed due to the economy and what we can expect in the future. Additionally, how the firm's financials and financial benchmarking are constantly communicated to the partnerships is changing as well, and we examine some best practices of technological transparency.

 

The ACC Value Initiative and What It Means to Technologists

International Legal Technology Association

Panel discussion, August 27, 2009, 3:30 PM ET

Our clients are now creating joint and highly-structured initiatives aimed at closing the perceived gap between what legal services cost and the value clients receive from those services. As law firms develop responses to the value initiative, what role can technology play, and what technologies are available that increase leverage, lower cost or increase value?

 

 Developing a Thriving Practice Group

Webinar recorded July 14, 2009; CD-ROM available for purchase

Practice groups are the key business units of law firms.  Each group has its own market and its own competitors, and each should have a clear, effective road map for developing new business.  Few do.  This 90-minute Altman Weil webinar outlines practical strategies to target high-potential clients, craft the most effective selling strategy and close the deal on profitable new business, even in a challenging economy.

 

Landing New Business: The ABCs of Making the Sale

Webinar recorded July 21, 2009.  CD-ROM available for purchase

Many marketing efforts fail at the last step – making the sale.  Why? Because of failing to understand and address the prospective client’s needs.  The best marketers in any industry know they need to be responsive to their customers’ desires. And when you can’t put yourself in your prospect’s shoes to understand what they want, you’re guaranteed to fail at landing new business.  It’s crucial that you understand what will turn a business development opportunity into an actual client. The real secret of closing isn’t a magic word… it’s understanding your client’s needs, and addressing those needs.  Client development is critical to your firm’s success, especially in this environment. And it’s something that every attorney should be actively engaged in – rainmaker or not.

Winning the Marketing Biathlon

Regular readers of the Dilbert comics know that marketers are ridiculed, along with the trolls in accounting and incompetent pointy-haired bosses.  The apparent message is that Marketing is an unwelcome distraction from the real work of building quality products that buyers want.  This sentiment is not uncommon in law practice, and the recent economic downturn has accelerated the scrutiny of marketing expenditures by increasingly cost-conscious law firm leaders.  In some cases, the cost of a senior marketer is deemed to be extravagant; in others, senior marketers who are able to participate in the dialog over structural changes in our industry are sought after.  But far too often, lawyers consider Marketing to be something to be delegated to other people. Dilbert Marketing Biathlon

If it were as simple as hiring a savvy marketer, then the smartest law firm leaders would hire the most credentialed marketers and then go back to practicing law.  Alas, it doesn't work that way.  For starters, Marketing means something different to everyone.

"What I really need from Marketing is someone to bring in another $10 million in revenue. My practice is fine but my compensation suffers because my colleagues aren't able to bring in work like I do."  (NY Midsize firm rainmaker describing why he doesn't rely on Marketing resources in his practice)

"Marketing, to me, is about keeping the trains running on time.  We're always busy so we're not looking for someone to bring in new business, but we need someone to provide administrative support for our own efforts." (Boston Biglaw partner explaining why the firm is spending too much on Marketing)

"Don't use the phrase 'change agent.' Don't even hint about rocking the boat. These guys have it figured out and the last thing they want to hear is that there's a better way of doing things."  (Recruiter seeking candidates for an AmLaw 20 CMO role)

I captured the above quotes from 2006 to early 2009, a time of relative plenty. How have things changed now that the sky is falling?

"We're sitting tight for the moment, assessing our options and closely watching spending. We're still meeting with qualified candidates but we don't expect to hire before year end."  (Philadelphia Biglaw managing partner explaining the long delay in filling his senior marketing role)

"Haven't you been reading the news? The optics of sending anyone to a conference, any conference, don't look good right now."  (DC Biglaw chairman explaining why the firm has banned lawyers and staff from attending business development conferences in 2009)

We apparently have a long way to go before we establish that Marketing, or the continuum of identifying client markets to winning new work to ensuring satisfaction and repeat business, isn't a distraction from the practice of law, it's a fundamental component of any viable enterprise.  Recent events have aptly demonstrated that law firms relying primarily on constant market demand for their services and that do little to generate demand or differentiate from other providers of these services, will suffer more when demand declines.  It has.  And they are.

Done properly, Marketing is about growing the top line.  If Marketing is an expense in your firm -- not deemed to be an expense, but actually is an expense -- then you're not doing it right.  In good times or bad, here are the fundamentals of a good Marketing program:

Identify desirable target markets.  These can be existing clients or new clients.  Targets will reflect clients that have needs tied to what the firm offers, ideally multiple needs across practices and geographies, and these needs will endure.

Generate awareness and leads.  Many law firms look the same and act the same, notwithstanding the protestations about unique cultures.  Similarly, many law firms present the same face to the market.  Don't believe it?  One of my favorite sites is the automatic brochure generator produced by my friends at Fishman Marketing.  Differentiating your firm to buyers is critical, and will become even more important as corporate CFOs, CEOs and procurement officers influence buying decisions.  An important role of Marketing is to turn awareness into opportunities.

Turn opportunities into business.  This is called Sales in the real world.  In law practice, we call it business development.  And this is not a process that can be easily delegated to marketers!  Lawyers should be trained to advance opportunities to a close, by developing an understanding of the potential client's needs and then mapping the firm's services to these needs.  All pitches and proposals are 100% customized, all efforts are tracked, and lawyers are held accountable for their efforts.

Ensure client satisfaction and repeat business.  This can mean implementing policies for timely billing, or alternative fee arrangements, or periodically and systematically surveying clients.  It can mean reducing inefficiencies in law firm operations that increase the client's costs or the firm's overhead.  When trying to improve client satisfaction and secure repeat engagements, there are few areas of a law firm which should escape scrutiny.

Assess performance.  No successful enterprise maintains success for long without a rigorous approach to self-analysis.  We know what new work is lucrative and that we should pursue more by examining the economics of the work we completed.  We improve our chances of winning repeat engagements by taking a good, hard look at what missteps lead to client dissatisfaction.  We know what efforts generate the most visibility and opportunities by studying our expenditures, and subsequently increasing those with a good return and decreasing those with a poor return.  Businesses that embed the notion of a "feedback loop" into their culture are known to be more responsive, more nimble, more adaptable to changing circumstances.

As we enter the home stretch in the latter half of 2009, it's time for law firm leaders to assess whether the current economic downturn is a temporary blip that will be largely behind us come 2010, or whether the playing field has changed for the foreseeable future.  Recent studies have shown that most law firm leaders are in a "wait and see" mode, a not surprising stance since the profession prides itself on precedence rather than breaking new ground.  But there are law firm leaders out there planning for a different future.  They are preparing their team for a new game, with new rules, some yet unwritten.  Some feel it's a sprint, to some it's a marathon.  Perhaps it's a biathlon or even a decathlon.  We need to continue doing what we excel at, but also add some new skills.  The effort that won the medal last year isn't nearly enough to win this year.

Whither Sales in Law Firms?

Lawyering is a noble profession, not to be confused with the untidy and significantly less elegant profession, if one can call it that, of sales.  I didn't go to law school to learn how to sell.  My clients trust me; they don't want some smarmy sales pitch.  I can see why firms of a lesser reputation resort to such tactics, but my firm is different and that won't work here. Hogwash or doctrine?  Should the modern law firm embrace sales, particularly in light of the changing economic climate where demand for legal services is no longer a given?  Or will sales blow over, like TQM, and branding, and knowledge management, and six sigma, and all the other corporate fads that have no place in the practice of law?  Can we even have a rational conversation about sales in law firms when we don't even call it sales but rather euphemistically refer to it as business development so as not to offend the delicate sensibilities of the timekeepers?

Last week I had the good fortune to share a daïs with several experts in the field of law firm sales.  Steve Bell is, to my knowledge, the first head of sales in a major US law firm, and now the CMO of Womble; Rob Randolph is the director of business development at Midwest power house Bryan Cave, a firm noted for innovation; Jim Cranston is a longtime professional sales trainer now with legal consultancy Hildebrandt; and our moderator was Patrick Fuller, Senior Business Development Executive with ThomsonReuters, the giant in information services for law firms.  The venue was the annual Raindance conference, produced by the Legal Sales & Service Organization and managed by ThomsonReuters.  Our host was the fine Hotel Sax, adjacent to the House of Blues in Chicago (although I would be remiss if I didn't give a shout out to the fine folks at the brand new Hotel Wit just across the bridge at State & Lake).

The first order of business was to question the premise:  Should law firms have a sales force?  The panel was of one mind that no matter what we call it every law firm has an existing sales force whose role it is to bring in new business.  In most firms they're called lawyers.  By the way the lawyers are also the products and the owners.  Whether a firm should add extra folks whose responsibilities are limited to sales is a separate question, and turns out to be the red herring in most conversations of this sort.

I've long contended that the essence of good lawyering is the essence of consultative selling.  Both focus on identifying and understand problems, and finding solutions to overcoming the problems.  Any lawyer who considers himself a good problem solver can also be a good business developer.  And just like there are multiple approaches to solving a problem, there are multiple approaches to generating new business.  There is no one-size-fits-all.

There is a wrong way, of course.  When you watch classic sales movies like "Tommy Boy" and "Glengarry Glen Ross" and "Boiler Room," the sort of movies that inspires poor students with winning smiles and firm handshakes to make a living by coercing others, I certainly hope you realize that this kind of selling is as far from consultative selling as playing your Wii video tennis game is from facing Roger Federer's blistering serve on center court at Arthur Ashe stadium at the US Open.

We discussed the difference between Marketing and Sales.  Marketing generates awareness and leads.  Sales is a process of identifying needs and offering customized solutions.  In this context, "closing" is a natural outcome of good needs analysis and issue spotting, rather than coercion.  When you submit a proposal, if you don't have a good sense of the probability of winning the business, then you've skipped some steps along the way, guaranteed.

Marketing may be all that's needed when demand is high.  After all, the goal then is to direct potential clients your way rather than to an alternative supplier.  Absent high demand, e.g., the state we're in today, sales (okay, business development) becomes more important.  We must differentiate ourselves not by our credentials but by our ability to understand the client's business (not legal!) concerns and identify solutions to overcoming those concerns.  We can differentiate ourselves as much by the use of a consultative and customized process to identify concerns and solutions, not just by the solution itself.

I've recently been called upon by a few large firms to help them sort through their marketing priorities.  In light of the recent slowdown, they are busier than ever trying to win new clients.  My friends in marketing departments are short-staffed and working long hours fulfilling the requests for marketing support, and demanding partners don't like to be kept waiting.  But let's be clear about what are good efforts to develop new business and what is merely posturing.  Asking the marketing department to produce yet another practice or industry brochure or compile a pitch book of deal lists and bios to leave behind with a prospective client after a lunch meeting is not developing business.  Business development cannot be delegated.  Marketing can be, but to generate business you must sit with a client or prospective client and ask the questions that will uncover needs and lead to customized solutions.  Pitch books are busy work, efforts that make it seem like we're making progress toward winning work by showcasing all that we can do.  They have a role.  But this isn't sales.

The panel provided insights into the areas where sales experts can augment a law firm's own lawyers' efforts.  But first, let's understand the math.  No professional salesperson or sales consultant or in-house marketing & business development professional can have an impact on par with the combined strength of every member of a law firm partnership even marginally improving his or her skills at winning new business.  So where can sales professionals add value?

In-house and outside sales experts are catalysts.  Good lawyers, even those who buy into the consultative sales process, suffer from periodic call reluctance.  By contrast, professional salespeople are often eager to pick up the phone to schedule a visit or make an introduction.  Cold calling and setting up meetings with people we don't know is daunting to many people, which is why many corporate sales teams have dedicated appointment setters.  Look to your in-house experts to help arrange initial meetings.

All sales take place on a continuum, where the suspect becomes a prospect becomes a client becomes a repeat client.  Most call this the sales funnel because there are typically far more prospects than clients.  Selling legal services is no different.  If we take the prospective client from initial introduction to pitch within minutes, our probability of success is limited.  Anyone who has dressed up to visit a client with the express purpose of reading the firm brochure to the client (we often call this a "beauty contest")  is familiar with these odds.  However, when we take time to get to know the prospective client, walk him through an organized analysis of his needs, prepare customized proposals that demonstrate an in-depth understanding, help quantify the impact of doing nothing, then when we ask for the business our odds are much greater.  Professional salespeople are accustomed to working a process, and can help lawyers stay focused on the next step.  Left to their own devices, many lawyers will hold an informative initial meeting and then wait for the phone to ring.  It might help to have an expert nudge now and again.

I've hired many former athletes as salespeople, and not because their imposing physical presence convinces buyers to cough up money!  Athletes have a lifelong understanding of how training, repetition and a focus on details lead to success.  Athletes practice fundamentals over and over and over.  Do you think the layup lines and shoot-arounds before the opening tap at professional basketball games are in place merely for show?  Practice leads to muscle memory.  A professional salesperson will never walk into a client meeting without having scripted and practiced what will take place.  Those who believe preparation consists of huddling in the client's lobby deciding who will take the lead and who will say what mere moments before walking in to deliver your pitch have as good a chance as a popcorn vendor who selects 4 teammates at random from the crowd moments before tip-off to compete against the Los Angeles Lakers.

We closed by touching on compensation for professional salespeople in law firms.  The mantra is that fee-splitting is not ethical and therefore not allowed by the various Bar associations.  Once again, the business of law firms is unique and corporate techniques won't work here.  Nonsense.  Every corporation has constraints of a similar magnitude.  How do you compensate the salesperson who made the original sale a year ago when the customer buys an upgrade this year from the service team?  How do you compensate the team serving the customer's west coast office when the decision maker resides in the east coast office?  When we bundle two more services, do we split or overpay compensation?  These specific challenges may not mirror what takes place in a law firm, but should illustrate that finding a way to compensate people who are instrumental in making a sale isn't any more difficult in a law firm than in a corporate setting.  Find some correlation between revenue growth and level of contribution, revisit it periodically for fairness.  And try not to fall into the trap of assuming that since we made the sale, we must have been predestined to make the sale, and therefore let's discount the contribution of those who helped make the sale.

Most lawyers didn't enter law school to become salespeople.  And nothing I've described above requires a change in profession.  Whether the objective is to improve the selling skills of the lawyers or to find the right fit for a professional salesperson on the staff, the real takeaway is that to survive and thrive in today's market requires more than waiting for the phone to ring.  Solving a client's problems shouldn't be all that daunting a task.  What are you waiting for?

Law Firm Leaders and Law Firm CMOs: Stop Whining and Get On With It

The legal marketing community has been abuzz in the last few days after Zach Lowe in the AmLaw Daily posed the question, "How Essential is a CMO?" following the announcement that long-tenured BigLaw CMO Ed Schechter left Duane Morris.  Experts have weighed in, from Heather Milligan's dead-on comparison between an essential CMO and a non-essential CMO, and Mark Beese's list of five critical contributions of a top CMO. Indeed, in this space I have often challenged law firm leaders to take stock of their current organizational structure, adjusting not just compensation and staffing ratios, but finding new and innovative ways to deliver legal services in more cost-effective ways.  Since a seasoned BigLaw Chief Marketing Officer is all-in a half million dollar investment, it certainly makes sense to question whether in today's economic climate this is a wise use of a law firm's capital.  Like most good debates, there are multiple valid perspectives.

A seasoned marketing executive can help a law firm differentiate itself from the pack.  In a world where every law firm claims to be big but offers a personal touch, represents big corporations to small businesses, values diversity, is client-focused and offers leading expertise in dozens of practices, one can readily see the value in standing apart from the crowd.  Don't believe me?  Visit Ross Fishman's Automatic Brochure Generator and tell me if it's indistinguishable from your firm's own copy.

A seasoned marketer can help define the optimal client footprint, i.e., which work do we enjoy, that is profitable, in growth industries, with clients who have needs that span our practice and office mix.  Instead, most of the many firmwide and practice group marketing plans I've reviewed tend to fall into the "We'll chase all new revenue" category.

A seasoned marketer will be able to distinguish between building awareness and generating business, and therefore offer tactical support to move prospects from a wish list to an active client list.  Nearly every marketing plan I've observed includes at least one "unicorn" statement (referring to my daughter's wish for a unicorn on her 3rd birthday):  "We hope to increase revenue from key clients and prospects in our target markets."  This is essentially useless.  What it really means is "We hope the phone will continue to ring as a result of worldwide demand for legal services, despite our inept approach to business generation."  Good marketers don't traffic in unicorns; they take actions and build processes that are designed to generate revenue.

A seasoned marketer will build an operation that performs the above tasks, and many more, in such a way as to optimize the competing constraints of speed, quality, subject matter expertise, available resources, time zones and, shall we say, partner importance.  It's a poor operation that merely reacts to whoever is shouting the loudest at any given moment.

So why don't law firms rush to hire experienced professional marketers?  And why are many eliminating, or considering eliminating, those they have in place, or delaying replacement hires?  It's as simple as BigLaw leaders not understanding the revenue-generating impact of a good CMO.  But the legal marketing community isn't blameless either.

Many of our most senior marketers are hesitant to embrace the financial aspect of the role.  Measuring return on marketing investment is difficult even in the corporate sector, and BigLaw poses additional challenges because annual budgets are a relatively new phenomenon, partners often have great latitude in spending "marketing" funds and expenditures are typically viewed as one-time debits to cash flow and profits rather than investments with multi-year horizons.  As a result, many senior marketers are thankful they aren't given budget responsibility and don't contribute to revenue forecasting when in fact this is a glaring omission.

BigLaw partners operate under the amusing notion that a flat governance model in which every partner is an equal owner with equal authority is somehow a rational business choice, when in fact it's an inefficient, extraordinarily dilutive and disruptive structure that persists due to inertia.  To be clear, the partners can organize their sandbox however they want, but this scenario rewards senior marketers who have learned to please partners above advancing the financial interests of the firm.  Indeed, there are countless examples of experienced marketers from other disciplines stymied by the bizarre world of BigLaw.

As one CMO put it to me without irony, "Success in a large law firm is all about credibility, which means accepting that we don't often do things the right way, we do them our partners' way, but after about a year of serving their needs you should have built up enough credibility to gently make suggestions, most of which they'll discard, but to survive you can't try to do too much too quickly."

And let's not overlook the recruiters in the field who specialize in moving around the same players, or at least the same skillset, because it's the safe approach to placement. I've been approached more than two dozen times for law firm CMO roles and each recruiter plays some variation of the same tune: "This firm is not like all the rest. They have good practices, with loyal clients, and very few toxic partners. They don't need a change agent, what they need is someone to keep the trains running on time. They hired someone in the past who spent a lot of the partners' money (on restructuring, branding, CRM, advertising, or whatever) so now they really just want someone to maintain what's in place."  Or as one BigLaw leader euphemistically declared, "We're picky and we're looking for the perfect candidate."

There is no perfect formula for a law firm CMO, though some have offered useful advice here and  here and here.  Others have offered criticism, here and here.  I am a long-time passionate supporter of the legal marketing profession and its professional association, and I'm a paid adviser to law firm and practice group leaders on how to grow and manage their business.  This experience has led me to these simple conclusions:

  • All businesses need a continual focus on identifying targets and pursuing opportunities.  While a law firm shouldn't mimic a traditional corporation in all respects, recent events aptly demonstrate that BigLaw leaders who confused high demand with business acumen should now seek expert assistance to help them create demand.
  • BigLaw leaders need to discard the outdated notion of the role of a CMO, hire experts who know their craft, and give them air cover to inform the debate and drive positive change.
  • Legal marketing has come a long way but still has opportunities for growth.  The old formulas valuing longevity and loyalty and keeping the peace should make more room for financial acumen, forecasting and planning, business development  and executive presence.  To be sure, people skills are always important, but let's find a way to solve for financial success rather than merely keeping partners happy.

We don't all have to get along. But we do have to recognize that long-needed change is afoot, and with change comes discomfort -- and this applies equally to BigLaw leaders and legal marketers.  Indeed, in my prior corporate life some of our greatest successes came only after forceful debates and significant disruption. The economic downturn has already provided the disruption, so let's not let it go to waste.

Galileo Was Wrong: The Earth Revolves Around Lawyers!

In Biglaw, there's an established hierarchy: Partners are at the top of the heap, followed by junior partners, non-equity partners, senior associates, associates, paralegals and then staff (although some C-level administrators have risen to a more exalted status). Where do clients fit in? It depends. Sometimes they are listed in strategy documents as more important than the partners, but generally we know this not to be true. In actual fact, few law firms rely on client needs as their driving force. Law firms are law firm-centric. In fairness, the legal market is at the tail end of a cycle of near limitless demand for legal services. In a demand-rich market, existing clients and new clients will come calling no matter what you do, so it's hard to expect a change in behavior when it's so profitable to stay the course. But where clients are concerned, there is general agreement that the client's law department, represented by the General Counsel or Chief Legal Officer, is the appropriate focus of attention. By and large this works. Many business leaders aren't sophisticated enough to grasp the nuances of legal issues, so it's best to have a buffer between the businesspeople and the lawyers/counselors. I don't buy it.

I've had the good fortune to lead divisions of publicly-traded businesses, and I can't recall a single instance where I or my colleagues felt insufficiently equipped to address business or marketplace issues and as a result needed to turn to our in-house law department or outside counsel for insights. In fact the opposite was often true. In over a decade of boardroom participation, only a few enlightened colleagues of mine regularly invited the General Counsel or law department liaison to our strategy meetings. These were the same leaders who invited the head of HR to attend as well. The feeling was, it's important for everyone to understand what we're trying to accomplish as a business, and what challenges we face, so everyone can execute their function in accordance with the agreed-upon goals. Very rarely did the HR leader or the lawyers have a speaking role in the substantive discussions, though they were expected to provide updates on their functional areas. This is not a slight to the in-house lawyers or HR professionals. It's merely a fact. In any enterprise there are those who formulate strategy and those who execute. The legal department and the HR departments executed.

On a number of occasions where we gathered with the board or executive team of an acquisition target in a secret location to discuss a business combination, we always invited the lawyers because there were items on the checklist that only they could handle. But they otherwise didn't speak much. When outside lawyers were invited, they sat next to the in-house lawyers and spoke even less. Again, none of this is meant to demean the important role lawyers play in doing deals, but the point is they were there to identify and quantify risks in executing the deal so the business people could incorporate this into the financials, or choose to build versus buy if the risk was too great. We never asked for a go/no-go decision, and we didn't ask for exhaustive explanations of the legal issues in play. We asked about the obstacles, the techniques to overcome the obstacles, and the cost of doing so -- and not the legal cost, i.e., the legal bills, but the cost to proceed. For example, I wouldn't want to know how much the law firm will charge to counsel us on new regulations; I wanted to know how complying with new regulations would impact the cash flow projections. Again, the point is, on the business side we rarely think of things in legal terms, but in terms of how legal issues impact our ability to proceed.

In point of fact, the earth does not revolve around the lawyers.

I met recently with the managing partner of a well-established mid-size firm. I was advised that he was brilliant, an incomparable mind in a firm of brilliant minds, which led to his status as the firm's leading rainmaker for a generation. Indeed I found him charming, engaging and clearly of high intellect. But his "secret" approach to winning business is simple and he knows it: he discusses business issues with his prospects and clients, always looking at things from a business perspective rather than a legal perspective. As a result, he has become a trusted business advisor to his clients, not merely a lawyer. This partner is held in high esteem by his colleagues, but many find his approach mystical and unconventional. I find it to be perfectly in keeping with the sentiment expressed above. Business executives don't need legal advice; they need to identify and quantify how legal issues will impact business decisions. This managing partner is concerned that not enough of his young lawyers get this point. I think he's right.

You may have heard about the brilliant dialog taking place on Legal OnRamp regarding the hoped-for demise of the billable hour, which picks up the gauntlet thrown down by ACC in its Value Challenge to change the in-house counsel/outside counsel dynamic. Along these same lines, a very smart colleague of mine, Ron Friedman, recently wrote a short discourse positing how a corporate CEO and his CFO likely came to the conclusion that finally, after years of waiting for the law department to reign in legal spending, it was time to change the game. It's a clever piece and you should read it. My only quibble is the premise for the conversation:

CFO: We need to talk about how much we spend on legal. Since our fiscal year ends in November, I usually have time over the holidays to do some real thinking. This year, I read up on the legal market. It’s not pretty. And I’m not sure our general counsel is the solution.

CEO: Ok, you catch me at a good time. Yeah, I agree our GC is not controlling costs. What can we do?

CFO: Legal costs keep going up, both in absolute dollars and as a percent of revenue. Other cost centers – HR, Marketing, Facilities, and even my own Finance department – have driven costs down as a percent of revenue. Sure, we face more regulations and law suits. But give me a break. Lots of articles report on in-house lawyers complaining about costs. The GC response? Precious little beyond begging for discounts.

CEO: You’re preaching to choir. I hear lots of complaining about legal costs. The whole legal thing is like that movie Ground Hog Day with an even worse twist. Every day is the same but nothing ever improves, lawyers don’t learn from re-plays. It’s hard to figure out how a whole economic sector got so stuck.

CFO: Actually, it’s easy to see why we’re stuck. Who buys legal services? Lawyers. Where do our lawyers come from? The law firms we retain. Do our lawyers think the same as our outside firms? Yes. Are lawyers trained to manage? No. What do our inhouse lawyers do? Lawyering, not managing. So we’re stuck with buyers who share the same bad traits as our suppliers and who travel in the same circles. The hard question is how to get the system unstuck.

In my experience, it's very unlikely that a CEO and CFO would frame the issue in terms of the evolution taking place in the legal industry any more than we'd investigate changes in coffee bean production when looking for cost savings from the company's hospitality vendors. More likely the annual (more often quarterly and lately even monthly) exercise to identify and reign in uncontrolled costs will eventually paint the legal department as the only function unable to provide and stick to a budget. I've written before about how division heads are required to submit revenues and costs 18 months in advance, incorporating whatever uncertainty we can and notwithstanding exogenous events we're held to these targets, and for acquisition or new product business cases we're often held to 5 to 8 year cash flow projections. However, we routinely receive reports from the legal department indicating that they can't provide even a broad range for legal costs for the usual transactional items, e.g., immigration, employment, real estate, etc., let alone pinpoint complex litigation or M&A costs. So a more plausible premise for the discourse above might be:

CEO: Have we identified the cost centers that have unallocated funding and swept them of all but the costs linked to our strategic priorities?

CFO: All but the legal department. They claim there are too many uncertainties to fix a budget beyond headcount costs, and even these may fluctuate depending on the volume of legal work.

CEO: Hogwash. Give them another chance to establish a budget using a decision tree or Bayesean analysis or whatever methods they feel are appropriate, incorporating the risks and complexity of our strategic priorities. If they can't do it, assign them a fixed reduction percentage and then tie the GC's bonus to achieving the funding envelope.

CFO: Done.

If this conversation hasn't occurred in the board room of most companies in recent months, it will. In a recent interview a colleague conducted with a General Counsel, we learned that the GC was given a mandate by his CEO to reduce legal spending by 70%.  Ouch!  If you're a law firm partner, are you ready to help your client identify and quantify the risks associated with his organization's business strategy? Do you understand that if you are unable to participate in this discussion, there are many other law firms who are gearing up for this exact conversation? What will you be doing instead?