Improving the Certainty of Legal Budgets - a Collaborative Workshop

It's law firm annual retreat season and I've been traversing the country presenting to practice groups and entire firms and preaching the importance of predictability in legal budgets.  As one client wrote to me afterwards, "Thank you for making 'predictability' our new buzzword!"  My perspective is somewhat unique, as I explain how using budgets can improve the quality of the legal work product, improve client satisfaction and generate greater profits for the law firm.  Who wouldn't want to achieve these disparate and elusive outcomes simultaneously?  Well, quite a few, as it turns out.  Many lawyers raised on the billable hour continue to feel that any approach other than maximizing hours is a slippery slope, destined to result in increased risk and lower compensation.  They could not be more wrong, and as regular readers of my articles can attest, I can demonstrate this in terms that even math-challenged lawyers can embrace! There are quite a few tactics and tools to help in the creation and fine-tuning of legal matter budgets.  In fact, I will be participating in a collaborative workshop on Thursday, May 16, in Washington, DC, where groups of in-house counsel and outside counsel, along with colleagues from the law firm marketing and finance departments, will work together on strategies and tactics to develop legal matter budgets.  What information is necessary?  How much information should law departments share to help law firms craft an RFP and a budget?  Who's responsible when something unexpected occurs and the budget no longer reflects the scope of the matter?  And so on.  If you've struggled with these issues or others related to legal matter budgets -- and honestly, who hasn't? -- then join us.  The workshop is produced by TyMetrix, and here's the workshop agenda:

Opening TED-Style Discussion: Emerging Trends in Buying Legal Services—Law firms and corporate law departments will collaboratively examine key elements and challenges that arise when budgeting and forecasting the business of law. The group will discuss what current tools that exist to improve planning and the factors that must be considered, such as average matter durations, total costa, rates, and staffing allocations for matters by timekeeper role, phase, task, and geography.

Workshop Collaboration: Improving the Certainty of Budgeting and Forecasting—Hear and discuss new ways corporate law departments and law firms can improve the certainty of budgeting and forecasting in case study exercise with peers. Groups will examine a real-life legal challenge and develop a proposal that is acceptable to both the firm and the corporation.

Workshop Results & Discussion: Scope, Baseline, Benchmark, Value—Upon conclusion of the group exercise, there will be a collective presentation of the workshop findings mapped to four defined pillars—Scope, Baseline, Benchmark, Value—that provide a blueprint for better budgeting and forecasting for both law firms and corporations.

TyMetrix LegalVIEW® Forums are peer-to-peer content driven sessions designed to exchange ideas and best practices related to an emerging trend in the buying—and selling—of legal services.

Join me in Washington, DC on May 16 by registering here.  Enrollment is free, but come prepared to roll up your sleeves and contribute.  If you can't make this session, there are two more in the series this year:  July 11 in Chicago ("Sourcing Legal Providers in a Changing Business Environment")and September 26 at Terranea Resort in Rancho Palos Verdes, CA ("Negotiation Strategies for Corporations & Law Firms").

Each session generates best practices in the form of a white paper which is available to all.  Here is the white paper that was produced after the workshop held in February, Establishing Value-Based Pricing and AFAs.  See this synopsis by Dr. Silvia Hodges.

 

Timothy B. Corcoran delivers keynote presentations and conducts workshops to help lawyers, in-house counsel and legal service providers profit in a time of great change.  To inquire about his services, click here or contact him at +1.609.557.7311 or at tim@corcoranconsultinggroup.com.

InnovAction Awards 2013 Call for Entries

COLPM LogoI'm pleased to announce the call for entries for the 2013 InnovAction Awards, a program I'm chairing once again.  The InnovAction Awards, conducted annually by the College of Law Practice Management, is a world-wide search for lawyers, law firms, law departments and others in the legal services field that have invented or successfully applied new business practices to the delivery of legal services.  The goal of the InnovAction Awards is to demonstrate to the legal community what can be created when dedicated professionals with big ideas and strong convictions are determined to make a difference. Who Should Apply?

Loyal readers from the law firm, law department and legal service provider ranks, take a look at your own organization's offerings, products, services or businesses practices. What approaches have you employed this year that have produced fantastic results?  What efforts have resulted in higher client satisfaction, generated more leads, provided a substantial number of people with access to justice, improved efficiency, improved quality, generated a buzz, positioned your organization for future success, developed stronger leadership, leveraged existing knowledge or opened new markets for your services?  Innovation can take many forms.  You can read about the winners here and browse the Hall of Fame to learn more about past Award recipients.

What are the Judging Criteria?

  • Disruption: does this entry change an important element of the legal services process for the better, and marketplace expectations along with it?
  • Value: is the client and/or legal industry better off because of this entry, in terms of the affordability, ease, relevance or its effect on legal services?
  • Effectiveness: has this entry delivered real, demonstrable or measurable benefits, for the provider, its clients, or the marketplace generally?
  • Originality: is this a novel idea or approach, or a new twist on an existing idea or approach?

Who's Eligible?

Any individual lawyer or law firm, practicing anywhere in the world, or any business providing services to lawyers, law firms or consumers of legal services, is eligible. An individual or firm may submit more than one entry so long as they are not duplicative.

 Only entries submitted in accordance with these instructions will be considered. We reserve the right to disqualify, at any time, any and all entries that do not comply with these instructions. All entries and supporting documents are subject to verification. Once submitted, entries become the property of the College of Law Practice Management and will not be returned. All entrants must be willing for their entries to be the subject of articles published in legal and business media. All entrants must be available for interviews and provide requested information in connection with verification of entries to The College of Law Practice Management. Any entrant who fails to comply with the foregoing will be disqualified.

Law firms employing members of the Board of Trustees of the College of Law Practice Management or members of the InnovAction Award Selection Committee will be ineligible for consideration.

How Do I Apply?

The deadline for submissions is June 30, 2013.  Interested in the nominations process?  Visit the How to Enter page to learn more.  Click here to download the 2013 InnovAction Awards application.

In-House Counsel Analytics - What do they Measure and Why?

We're aware that some in-house counsel rely (willingly or unwillingly) on procurement officers to make or influence decisions about the selection of outside counsel.  We're also aware that some in-house counsel are as mystified about the changing marketplace as their outside counsel, so in lieu of making wise choices based on predictability, value and subject matter expertise they hire the largest brand-name firm willing to accept substantial discounts.  But while these extremes make for good copy, the reality is there are many excellent in-house legal departments and business managers engaged in informed buying. I have the pleasure to moderate a panel discussion of several of these thought leaders at an upcoming Ark conference event aptly titled "Business Intelligence and Analytics in the Legal Profession."  The conference will be held at the AMA Executive Conference Centre in New York City on Thursday, April 18, 2013.  The specific one-hour session for our topic, titled "How Corporate Legal Departments are Using Analytics to Measure the Value of the Products and Services They Buy," will commence at 1 PM ET.  I will be joined by James Partridge, Chief Counsel of Ally Financial; Bob Ingato, Executive Vice President, General Counsel & Secretary at CIT Group Inc.; and Anne Sonnen, Deputy General Counsel & Chief Administrative Officer, Legal, Corporate & Compliance Group at BMO Financial Group.  We will present and discuss several specific examples of how in-house counsel use analytics to measure and select outside counsel.

From the session description:

As legal departments learn to capitalize on data-driven business intelligence, the opportunity to save money on outside legal spend increases dramatically. It’s no secret, they are using objective data in order to negotiate rates, assess risk, measure skill level, efficiency, flexibility, outcomes—embracing (and using) big data to measure the value of the products and services they buy. Tactical measures have been taken to integrate matter management, e-billing, and reporting systems to access detailed performance information on outside counsel—leveraging “tools of empowerment” to take advantage of an increasingly competitive market for legal services. To compound the challenge for law firms, legal departments have also tapped procurement teams in some cases to assist in-house lawyers with defining the scope of projects, selecting the right suppliers, negotiating cost, and evaluating performance. The client has become quite sophisticated and squarely focused on harnessing the power of their data.

Please join us if you can.  Register here.  Many thanks to sponsors TyMetrix Legal Analytics, IntApp, kiiac, Sky Analytics, Recommind, Thomson Reuters and DF Tech.

Not so fast, in-house counsel, you've also got some work to do!

Amidst all the virtual ink directed at lawyers for being poor businesspeople, another equally compelling point is too-often missed:  clients, particularly in-house counsel, have quite a few shortcomings as well.  At the core of my consulting practice is connecting these dots:  just as in-house counsel are often unhappy with outside counsel, internal business clients are often unhappy with the in-house counsel.  While the struggling economy has given in-house counsel more influence over outside counsel (influence they've always had but haven't exercised), let's not pretend that in-house counsel always know the best way forward. My corporate career had the usual arc when it comes to legal matters.  Early on I was exposed to the legal department only via contract or NDA negotiations, or occasionally when some adverse action elsewhere in the business required us to sit through an in-house lawyer's lecture on, say, sexual harassment.   As I moved up the ladder, I consulted the legal department on terminations, intellectual property rights, an occasional threat from a disgruntled customer.  When I reached the boardroom as a senior executive and eventually as CEO, a role which carried budget responsibility for the legal department and involvement in outside counsel selection, I interacted quite often with the legal department on restructuring, complex joint ventures and acquisitions, major contract renegotiations and other more critical matters.

In my companies, it was typically only after key strategic decisions were made that we brought in the lawyers to help execute the strategy, for the simple reason that we had a lot of in-house lawyers who felt it was their responsibility to thwart our every attempt at business growth.  We called them collectively "the Department of No" and we knew which lawyers to avoid and which lawyers to request. Now, I've acknowledged that it was a failing on our part to miss the important role an excellent in-house lawyer can  play in the board room.  I was lucky enough to have such counselors in my later corporate roles and they were true business people first and lawyers second.  To be sure, these lawyers upheld every ethical and professional standard expected of practicing lawyers, but they did so in the context of helping us manage the ongoing risk any business faces, rather than approaching their role as primarily academic or perhaps achieving complete risk avoidance.

In the interests of equal time, here are some suggestions for how in-house lawyers can improve their game and become better partners and trusted advisers to their internal clients.  Outside counsel should also take heed, because the more your efforts align with the in-house counsel's goals, the more likely you are to be embraced as a trusted adviser rather than a hired gun.

Understand the business.  I've written of my disappointment that some corporate back office functional leaders (ahem, Human Resources) barely understand the business, and this negatively impacts their ability to do their job.  Not once, ever, did one of my in-house counsel ask to shadow me or my team for a day to learn our business from the ground up.  Several would dial in or sit in on executive leadership meetings, but often their entire contribution in an 8-hour meeting would be to provide a 5-minute update on a pending wrongful termination suit or the status of a bill making its way through Capitol Hill that might pose some challenges.  We were lucky enough not to have repeat litigation, but a B-school classmate of mine laments that his company faces the same lawsuit over and over, and it never seems to occur to the lawyers that perhaps there's a systemic issue upstream in the business that could be addressed to prevent future suits.  In my consulting practice I advise outside counsel to request a "factory tour," donning a hard hat and walking the floor of a client's business.  It's astonishing how often outside counsel return to say that the in-house lawyer who arranged the visit had never taken a tour previously.

Understand the company's risk profile.  This is sometimes challenging to explain, but let's start with the caveat that I would never advocate playing fast and loose with laws or regulations that govern a business.  But there's a lot about running a business that requires interpretation, and there's a lot about running a business that involves taking risk.  Dilbert on Product SafetyThe in-house lawyers need to understand, and be comfortable with, the level of risk a company's executives are willing to take, within certain boundaries.  For example, it's not acceptable risk to allow a product out the door that continually fails safety tests, just to get it on shelves in time for holiday shoppers.  But it may be okay to enter new markets without a safety net if speed is of the essence.  Here's an example: we wanted to launch a new software product in Asia in the '90s, and we had to launch quickly or risk losing first-mover advantage to the competition. We asked the in-house counsel for a down and dirty approach to protecting our IP and launching within 3 months, and what we received -- with the help of some very expensive outside counsel -- was a proposal for 6-month project to protect our IP in every possible jurisdiction and papered in every possible way so as to minimize our risk.  Cooler heads prevailed and we settled on protecting our IP in those jurisdictions that had both a means and a will for enforcement (this was Asia in the '90s after all, where piracy was practically government sanctioned!) and the rest, well, we gambled that we could sell enough units to beat the competition before pirates started eating away at our profits.  In this case, the in-house counsel and the outside counsel viewed the risk very differently than the businesspeople.  We wanted to win in the market; they wanted to protect us at all costs.

Allow access to the business people. There are plenty of GCs who do a fine job serving their internal clients' interests and who are, and should be, the primary contact point for outside counsel.  But there are others, as the anecdote above illustrates, who have a different mindset than their internal clients.  When I work with law firms on legal project management, I stress the importance of knowing the underlying business outcome we're solving for, not just the instant legal issue.  Therefore, it's imperative to get to know the businesspeople, not because we want to do an "end run" around the GC, but because for outside counsel to deliver it's critical to know what's at stake and how that perception differs among stakeholders.  The GC may not be involved in the "make vs. buy" discussion and so may not know when the cost of acquiring that start-up will be more costly than the company building its own version of the start-up's product.  So during due diligence when we find IP infringement, or environmental contamination at the target company headquarters, either of which requires costly remediation, the GC and outside counsel might start to remediate rather than adjust the scope and budget for the businesspeople, who might decide to walk away instead.  Outside counsel who use these relationships to try to avoid the GC deserve to have their hands slapped.  But GCs who inappropriately limit contact with businesspeople out of a misguided "gatekeeper" mentality or, worse, for their personal job security, should be slapped too.

Embrace continuous improvement.  I can't tell you how many weeks of my life (and how many sales!) have been lost waiting for the in-house lawyer to approve a non-disclosure agreement hung up on some unimportant point that we had conceded countless times previously, or how many negotiations went south because our in-house counsel was too jammed up to work quickly so the faster, nimbler competitor won the order.  We all understand time constraints caused by volume.  But businesspeople also recognize that activities occurring in high volume are ideal candidates for process improvement.  Mark Chandler has automated numerous functions in Cisco's law department using process mapping and technology solutions to eliminate unnecessary steps, speed cycle time and bring the legal function closer to the business objectives.  I've heard hundreds of similar anecdotes from less visible GCs during the many in-house counsel workshops my team produced.  The key difference is to treat the law department as a business function subject to the same business process improvement mindset found everywhere else in the business, and not treat it as "law firm lite," a not-uncommon default approach for lawyers trained as partners in big law firms.

Make decisions based on data.  Most law departments employ some electronic billing.  (If not, turn from your screen right now and pick up the phone and begin the process of implementing e-billing!)  Whether the in-house team relies on years of its own billing data, harvested from multiple firms across multiple matters, or whether it augments the analysis with data culled from an aggregated and anonymized data warehouse offered by the e-billing provider (here or here), the key takeaway is that there is sufficient information available to drive better decisions - from legal budgets, to risk exposure, from expected fallout during a restructuring to expected gains from a convergence effort, and so on.  Most businesses have analysts in the finance or strategy or marketing departments offering feedback and recommendations to the executives.  No law department should be without analysis, if not its own analyst.  (I am moderating an upcoming panel on this topic here).

Hire outside counsel based on expertise and value.  In 2009 when the CFO cut the law department budget by 30% and demanded the GC "do more with less" without incurring additional risk or delaying throughput and, by the way, added a clause to the GC's compensation scheme that tied his or her annual bonus to staying within the thinner budget, issues pertaining to legal spending became very personal very quickly.  Loyalty went out the door along with many firms whose relationship partners believed their client relationship was sacrosanct... and whose billing rates were therefore set accordingly.  As we've seen, law departments have aggressively taken the reigns of late.  But many GCs, rather than rely on data to inform their outside counsel decisions, take a shortcut and substitute discounts for analysis.  Wielding a large club and demanding discounts from favored suppliers is, sadly, a tactic that many businesses employ -- including law firms who have employed their own procurement function as their own fortunes have suffered.  But just as procurement isn't focused solely on low cost, GCs shouldn't mistake discounts for increased value.  Just as we advise outside counsel to partner with clients, the clients have to partner with outside counsel.  You can't ask for a legal budget if you won't share voluminous information about the matter, or set of matters, you need addressed.  You can't refuse payment for scope creep if you won't help define the scope up front.  It's a lot easier to conduct the analysis described above when there's full disclosure from both law firm and law department, and from this you will distinguish the capable firms from the wanna-bes, the firms whose subject matter expertise informs their pricing decisions from the predatory pricers, the firms measuring the relationship over the long haul from those looking to generate profit one matter at a time, and so on.

The key takeaway is that we're all in this together.  Listening to in-house counsel endlessly bash outside counsel is not productive if the in-house counsel aren't helping to craft solutions.  And while we businesspeople don't typically hold panel discussions at conferences where we bash the in-house law department, we're often just as unhappy with our lawyers, and we're just as obligated to step in to improve things.  Connecting the dots between the three parties isn't easy, especially with compensation plans and long history which seem to create zero-sum games -- when one party "wins" another has to "lose" -- but these are solvable problems.  I, for one, am eager to get started.  Who's with me?

 

Timothy B. Corcoran delivers keynote presentations and conducts workshops to help lawyers, in-house counsel and legal service providers profit in a time of great change.  To inquire about his services, click here or contact him at +1.609.557.7311 or at tim@corcoranconsultinggroup.com. – See more at: http://www.corcoranlawbizblog.com

Ten Things I'd Do Differently as a Law Firm CEO

There are many good reasons for law firms to adopt business practices from other industry segments.  As has been made abundantly clear, the laws of economics apply equally to law firms as to other businesses.  Faced with declining demand and an oversupply of providers, law firms are experiencing unprecedented downward price pressure and clients are aggressively seeking substitutes.  Law firm leaders who have reduced overhead to maintain profit margins have learned that this approach falters when adverse economic conditions persist.  Many law firm leaders now struggle with what to do next to survive.

 Alternative fee arrangements are still considered necessary evils, rarely embraced but reluctantly accepted upon client demands.  Growing top line revenue through lateral recruiting remains a risky proposition because there is no guarantee a lawyer's clients are as portable as the lawyer.  Too, a lesson most of us learned as teens applies to lateral love affairs:  the pretty girl too popular to commit to one guy is, statistically speaking, unlikely to stay with you for very long either.

Lawyers, not unlike their forbears in other industries facing massive upheaval, tend to do more of what they know rather than proactively seek change, and as a result simple techniques to improve client satisfaction and retention -- efforts that in other industries are generally called "sales" -- are discarded as unseemly or unnecessary for educated professionals to take on. Law firms are not mere factories, churning out countless replicas of a popular product.  Nor are they think tanks focused on producing thought leadership for academics to ponder.  But law firms are somewhere on that continuum, subject to market forces, facing changing client needs, price pressure from entrenched competitors and constant innovation from new entrants.

Few law firm leaders have sufficient experience to navigate this maze.  But there is hope.  Unlike the leaders of, say, print encyclopedias, whose business model was disrupted by the unprecedented speed and force of the Internet, law firm leaders have plenty of corollary lessons to draw on to chart a course from fear to prosperity.  To be clear, I don't believe a law firm should be run primarily as a business.  I've been a CEO of a publicly-traded company and I climbed the corporate ladder in divisions of private and public multi-national corporations and there is a common thread:  the business school maxim that earning a profit is the primary goal is interpreted primarily as a toxic quest for short-term profits above all else, including the long-term health of the business, typically because executive incentive plans are pegged to short-term profit measures.  

A law firm can generate a healthy profit, which is not a shameful goal, while simultaneously improving client satisfaction and work product quality, and building a sustainable culture for the long haul.  But how?

Here are ten ideas drawn from my own corporate experience that law firm leaders can embrace to improve the fortunes of their firms.

Change the governance model.  Let's first dispense with the arcane notion that a partnership is an effective or efficient management structure.  Notwithstanding any potential tax or liability benefits of the business form, it is ridiculous to believe that all partners should have an equal say in the operations of the business, particularly after an organization reaches a certain size.  Nor is a dictatorship acceptable, even when led by a benevolent leader, because such organizations lack sustainable business processes and falter when the leader inevitably departs. Identify a core leadership team at the firm and practice group level and give them the authority to lead.  Stop allowing the blowhard down the hall to substitute his childish behavior for sound business practices.  Stop crowd-sourcing important decisions.  Speed up the decision process by eliminating needless voices.  Let the lawyers practice law and the leaders lead.

Productize the offerings. Every law firm has products, we just choose the collective delusion that legal services are unique and non-repeatable actions.  Sure, some matters require unique tasks, but every legal matter includes tasks that have been done before, usually many times before.  Figure out which products -- or service offerings if you will -- the firm produces profitably and effectively and commit these to a repeatable series of actions.  Repeatability leads to improved profitability and improved quality by reducing variability.  And yes, there will still be plenty of unique matters that only highly-trained and creative minds can tackle.  If you can find a matter or task that's so unique that it's never been done before, bill for it by the hour.  Otherwise...

Strategic Pricing

Strategic Pricing

Embrace strategic pricing.  Here's a revelation: clients will care less about the mechanics of your invoice, whether you bill by the hour, by the word or offer flat fees based on astrology charts, so long as the value delivered is commensurate with the price paid.  The practice of issuing invoices with “services rendered” didn’t die because clients grew smarter; it died because law firms grew stupider and adopted billing practices with perverse incentives.  The idea that a law firm might not need a fax machine if not for client demand, and therefore we charged $1 per page sent or received until the fax machine earned in excess of 100,000 times its cost was idiotic.  Thankfully, we learned the lesson and today don’t charge per email.  Or view legal research as a profit center… wait, what?   Learn what it costs the firm to produce and deliver its legal services.  Accept that there’s no “perfect” way to allocate overhead.  Determine the differential value your firm offers against the competition, if any.  Determine the client’s perceived value, if any.  Establish a price that covers your costs, delivers value and generates a profit.  If you can’t figure this out, hire a new finance team. If you can’t find a profitable price, focus on lowering your cost of delivery, not just your overhead. Or accept that the client may not place the same value on the offering that you do and find something else to offer that has greater value.

Reduce inefficiencies.  Law firms carry extraordinarily wasteful overhead.  If you want fine art in your Italian granite-tiled restroom, go for it.  If you want to sponsor every 5k run or splash your logo on every cocktail napkin offered and pretend it's a wise marketing investment, go for it.  But say no to the partner who demands his own graphic designer and high-capacity printing operation on the off chance he might leave a key proposal to the last second and need to run an after-hours-all-hands-on-deck fire drill to generate a boilerplate RFP response.  Stop running the same conflict checks on the same conflicted prospects, or their subsidiaries, by investing in a data cleanup operation, adding in corporate trees and linking your CRM system to your billing system and the conflicts database.  Improve your RFP win rate by requiring the lawyers adhere to best practices, instead of repeating the same mistakes.  Look at every single process in the firm's back office and find ways to eliminate redundant and wasteful steps.  Don't know how? Hire a firm that specializes in business process improvement (BPI) to do it for you, or to train you to do it.  Or hire a business process outsourcing firm (BPO) and let someone else manage your accounts payable function. On second thought, cease the silly sponsorships unless you secure a substantive speaking role and categorize the 5k run as a charitable donation or brand building exercise, not a business development activity.

Reduce the cost of goods sold.  The way to productize your offerings is to embrace legal project management and process improvement.  The techniques used to identify and reduce inefficiencies in the back office can be effectively applied to a legal practice.  When faced with flat or declining revenues, the sustainable way to maintain or grow profits and to defend against predatory competitors is to reduce costs at a faster rate.  If you've advised 100 clients on over 1,000 class action defense lawsuits, what are the specific factors correlated with defeating class certification?  If you've filed 500 appeals with the state's regulatory authority, what are the specific steps correlated with success?  Whether in litigation or transactions, there are repeatable steps on the critical path to success and excess steps that may be deemed helpful or necessary by risk-averse lawyers, but are not statistically relevant to risk-taking clients.  If all tasks in all matters are of high value to the client, then your realization rates would approach 100%.  If your realization rate is lower than 95% (or closer to the new normal of 85%) then by definition you are billing for steps that are either unnecessary or that the client deems unnecessary.  Learn how to talk to clients about budgets on every single matter -- how can you possibly employ strategic pricing otherwise?  Undergo a rigorous examination of your processes and develop project plans that reflect successful and profitable approaches.

Invest in knowledge management.  Back in the day, knowledge management (KM) meant writing summaries of notable briefs and memoranda and indexing and filing them away in a database for later retrieval in order to save time, which combined a task that no one liked with a result that no one wanted.  KM should be synonymous with a learning curve, or the economic principle that what we've done multiple times we can do more efficiently.  If your pricing analysis tells you the maximum market appetite for service X is $5,000,  then find ways to produce and deliver service X for far less than $5,000, relying on past experience to inform the process.  Poor leaders believe KM is a technology problem and will invest millions in tools that the lawyers happily ignore, but wise leaders recognize this as primarily a cultural problem.  Also, if you're lamenting the decline of associate training fully funded by clients, you'll be pleased to learn that a KM culture both accelerates and improves associate education.

Don't guess.  Forecast.  In countless practice group retreats I hear the same goal: "We'll grow the practice by 20% next year."  Yet inevitably there is little rigor applied to the target, let alone how to achieve it.  Businesses thrive on certainty and generally value repeatable revenue streams over one-time transactions, and corporate budgeting is a never-ending exercise to identify revenues and expenses.  No business can operate without a clear sense of its working capital, cash flow and resource needs.  Yet most law firms employ lagging indicators such as profits per partner to determine fiscal health.  That's like driving a car until the gas tank is empty to determine the gas tank's capacity, which is then retroactively applied to the prior day's agenda to see if we should have refilled the tank before embarking upon a series of errands or perhaps scheduled fewer errands.  Create and maintain a sales pipeline, applying simple methods to target the right prospects and predict not only future engagements but the resources needed, the likely cash flow and potential profits. Implement zero-based expense budgets and hold everyone accountable.  Measure the ROI of marketing investments, and not just the ad campaign but identify the partners whose entire "marketing" spend consists of taking the same clients or law school pals to sporting events with no discernible incremental business resulting from the expense.  Not sure how?  Select a client, any client, and ask them to walk you through their revenue and expense forecasting process.  But buckle in first, as it will be quite a jolt.

Measure client satisfaction constantly. There are many ways to do this.  Hire a consultant; send your managing partner on the road; ask your CMO to conduct interviews; conduct an annual satisfaction survey; conduct an end-of-matter survey after every matter.  Whatever you do and however you do it, study it, sustain it, and act on it.  Most law firms are "too busy" to systematically gather client feedback, naively believing good legal work speaks for itself.  Many who claim to care sit on findings that are too challenging to address, e.g., toxic rainmakers, institutional overbilling, etc.  Even those who measure client satisfaction effectively well tend to do so at too-infrequent intervals.  Take a cue from Disney, Ritz Carlton, even the local hairdresser -- know why clients hire you, know why they don't hire you, know why (and when!) they fire you, know what you do well and what you can improve.  Know these explicitly and implement programs specifically designed to improve performance.

Compensate for retention and profit.  Partner compensation is often described as the third-rail of law firm management.  We can talk all day long about changing the law firm model and improving client satisfaction, but nothing changes unless the partners are compensated for doing so.  Sadly, lawyers often must choose between personal wealth and client satisfaction.  Hogwash.  Partners will obviously act in their own self-interest when there is no alterntative. So let's give them some alternatives that tie improved compensation to improved client satisfaction.  Long-term client value always trumps short-term transactional profit. Huh? Said differently, satisfied clients will generate higher profits over a longer period by lowering the cost of sales (retaining existing clients is always less costly than acquiring new clients), because of a reduced learning curve (see above), because of steady utilization and because many-to-many relationships between firms and clients magnify these benefits.  Contrast this with over-billing a client on a single matter, generating short-term billable hours and high profit, but resulting in client defection and constant utilization peaks and valleys.  Huzzah, the partner hit her billable hours target... but was doing so good for the law firm?  Businesses deal with these compensation conundrums every day.  Do we reward the high-volume hunter salespeople who bring in the most new clients but also the most unhappy clients (because of a poor fit) and who require the highest commissions?  Or do we reward the farmers who nurture key clients over time but generate less incremental revenue?  Do we compensate more for selling high-margin products, often because there is little competition, or do we compensate more for selling low-margin high-potential products, because gaining market share is more critical?  Do we compensate for profits, even though salespeople have little influence on the cost of goods sold?  It may seem complex but relatively simple calculations can help us identify the optimal approach.  At present law firms tend to maximize one factor, originated hours.  By tweaking the formula, leaders can better recognize and reward lawyers who contribute at different points in the process.

Require leadership and management training.  There are terms and concepts above that may be unfamiliar to law firm leaders.  Indeed, many successful business leaders have strengths in some areas but not in others.  It doesn't require an MBA to lead a successful business, but it helps to be consciously competent.  In other words, know why you're successful and how to repeat it.  Many law firms and their leaders have been unconsciously competent for a long time -- successful, to be sure, but no one is quite sure why.  We believed it was because we were good lawyers offering necessary services at a fair, albeit supremely profitable, price.  But as it turns out, years of unlimited demand for legal services may have been more of a factor than our own efforts -- and when that demand disappeared, our best efforts failed.  I sat in a law firm executive committee meeting recently where the partners struggled to understand the nuances of corporate finance so they could better manage the inherent risk of alternative fees.  They were stunned to learn that others could understand, even explain, their law firm business model quite clearly.  They were more stunned to learn that by treating non-hourly fees as a risk to be minimized, they had eschewed significant profits on several sizable matters.  Your own mileage may vary.  But you don't have to do it on your own.  There are educated people who are willing to teach law firm leaders these techniques, and there are many who are eager to join firms to demonstrate from the inside. Stop treating the law firm leadership track as a hobby.  Stop hiring administrators whose primary asset is not rocking the boat.  Cast aside, or at least gently nudge, the unqualified or uninterested from the corner office and replace them with committed leaders -- at the firm-wide and practice group level -- who have or will learn new skills and who will employ experts to advise them along the way.

Contrary to what you may have heard, the law firm model isn't dead.  Nor is law firm growth.  But law firms and law firm leaders stubbornly adhering to outdated models are gasping for their last breath.  The modern law firm can thrive, but not if we pretend it's still 2007.  Or 1995.  Or 1975.  The future is now.  You can't do nothing.  Are you ready to lead?

Timothy B. Corcoran is principal of Corcoran Consulting Group, with offices in New York, Charlottesville, and Sydney, and a global client base. He’s a Trustee and Fellow of the College of Law Practice Management, an American Lawyer Fellow, and a member of the Hall of Fame and past president of the Legal Marketing Association. A former CEO, Tim guides law firm and law department leaders through the profitable disruption of outdated business models. A sought-after speaker and writer, he also authors Corcoran’s Business of Law blog. Tim can be reached at Tim@BringInTim.com and +1.609.557.7311.