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Another Law Firm Switches to Mac; Retainer Fee Strategy; Time Matters Messenger; DictaNet Review; Dual Monitors

By Sara Skiff | Thursday, April 22, 2010

Coming today to Answers to Questions: Jason Havens discusses why and how his firm switched to Macs, J Homel shares his strategy for handling retainer fees, Ruth Laura Edlund explains how to best use Time Matters Messenger, Frank Lanigan reviews DictaNet for phone dictation, and Simon Kogan discusses dual monitors. Don't miss this issue.

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Do you believe in the wisdom of crowds? In Answers to Questions, TechnoLawyer members answer legal technology and practice management questions submitted by their peers. This newsletter's popularity stems from the relevance of the questions and answers to virtually everyone in the legal profession. The Answers to Questions newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Accounting/Billing/Time Capture | Business Productivity/Word Processing | CLE/News/References | Coming Attractions | Dictation/OCR/Speech Recognition | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Law Office Management | Monitors | Networking/Operating Systems | Practice Management/Calendars | TL Answers

Rainmaking Secret Plus 97 More Articles

By Sara Skiff | Monday, April 19, 2010

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 78 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

Consulting Firm Mergers

Why Lawyers Will Love iPhone Software 4.0

Trying to Go to a Small Firm? Be Prepared for Rejection.

Business Development in a Recovering Economy

This issue also contains links to every article in the April 2010 issue of Law Practice Today. Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Consultants/Services/Training | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

BigLaw: The Case Against Today's Summer Associate Programs

By Marin Feldman | Monday, April 19, 2010

BigLaw-04-19-10-450

Originally published on April 19, 2010 in our free BigLaw newsletter.

We perform certain rituals in life without questioning why or thinking about how they came about. Exhibit A — summer associate programs. From an outsider's perspective, summer programs seem nonsensical. Law firms hire untested law students and then shower them with cash and other perks for doing basically nothing. Over the past few years, firms have toned down summer programs from their gluttonous peak in the early 2000s, but it's time to change them wholesale … or perhaps even let them go.

The Rationales for Summer Associate Programs Fail the Laugh Test

Depending on who you believe, summer associate programs originated for one of two reasons.

1. Evaluation

Law firms instituted summer programs to evaluate law students before they joined on a full-time basis. But this explanation doesn't square with the fact that until recently the full-time offer rate was almost always 100% regardless of performance. Summering law students just had to avoid doing something epically stupid like jumping naked into the Hudson River.

2. Training

Another explanation suggests that the programs were originally developed to mentor and groom budding attorneys for practice. But if grooming summer associates for real life practice was truly the goal, why have firms typically given summer associates fluffy make-work assignments instead of staffing them on real deals and cases? And unless you count senior associates offering advice on which cut to order for lunch at the local steakhouse, summers don't receive much mentoring from their firms either.

And So Do the Justifications for Their Excesses

Even if summer associate programs were implemented with noble intentions, it doesn't explain why the programs became — and to a large extent remain — such hedonistic bacchanals. Accordingly, two justifications emerged to explain the glut.

The first is that spoiling summers is necessary marketing and a small price to pay for attracting top talent. The reasoning goes that top law students, ostensibly in receipt of multiple summer offers but unable to distinguish among the firms, are more likely to summer at firms that ply them with expensive meals, theater tickets and rivers of top-shelf alcohol. But any top law student worth his or her salt chooses firms based on prestige, practice areas, and personality fit, not gifts.

The second justification is that summer excess signals to clients that the firms are healthy, wealthy, and able to woo the best law students. But again, the reality is that clients only care about summer associates in so far as they won't tolerate being billed for their time.

Time for a New Breed Of Summer Programs

Having gutted the rationales for summer associate programs, should law firms continue these programs? Yes, but only if they're transformed into apprenticeships that provide real job training.

Law students are hyper aware that even if they receive offers to join firms for the summer, those offers may not translate into jobs after graduation. And even if they do receive full-time offers, once they join, their job security is tenuous. This "rank-and-yank" mentality among large law firms is the new normal.

Law students want summer programs that build their practical skills so that in the event that they don't receive offers, they can use those skills to secure jobs elsewhere. It also benefits firms to implement training programs that actually prepare students to hit the ground running once they return after graduation.

Law firms don't have to eliminate all the perks of the summer associate program as long as they remember that teaching a man or woman to fish is more valuable than treating them to the escolar at Le Bernardin.

How to Receive BigLaw
Many large firms have good reputations for their work and bad reputations as places to work. Why? Answering this question requires digging up some dirt, but we do with the best of intentions. Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, BigLaw analyzes the business practices, marketing strategies, and technologies used by the country's biggest law firms in an effort to unearth best and worst practices. The BigLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BiglawWorld | Law Office Management

BigLaw: New Study Shows Large Firms Behind the Technology Curve

By Liz Kurtz | Monday, April 12, 2010

BigLaw-04-12-10-450

Originally published on April 12, 2010 in our free BigLaw newsletter.

Last year at the LegalTech conference in New York, Andrew Adkins, founder and director of the University of Florida Levin College of Law's Legal Technology Institute Legal Technology Institute, "roamed the exhibit floor for two days talking with vendors about the legal technology industry in general and asking exhibitors and conference attendees their thoughts about the near future and how technology will impact the profession." He performed the same exercise two months later at ABA TECHSHOW. He found that lawyers and legal vendors had just as many questions for him. Thus was born the 2010 Perfect Practice Legal Technology Institute Study (PP-LTI Study).

Legal vendors told Adkins that they wanted to know (1) what percentage of the legal profession uses practice management systems, (2) what barriers existed to their implementation, and (3) whether the legal profession had "reached a plateau" in adopting them. From this departure point, Adkins along with Perfect Practice and several other sponsors developed a survey, and distributed it to more than 25,000 randomly-selected lawyers, legal administrators, paralegals, and law firm IT personnel. The survey, however, did not stop there. Adkins also wanted to learn more about the legal profession's use of other technologies.

Larger Firms Lead the Way With Dual Monitors, Security

The PP-LTI Study yielded some surprising results. For example, Adkins found that small law firms by and large have failed to embrace even relatively simple technologies that address core concerns or promote important values such as efficiency, and client confidentiality.

For example, dual monitors "significantly increases efficiency," especially for those who copy and paste text between documents or use multiple applications. More than 66% of respondents, however, reported using only one monitor, and only 18% of this group indicated that they planned to add a second one within 12 months.

Large firm users were more likely to have adopted this technology, with 40% reporting that they used more than one monitor. Nonetheless, Adkins notes that neither cost nor complex integration concerns should restrict the adoption of dual monitors in smaller firms. "With costs of an extra monitor less than $200, law firms and legal departments should explore this benefit of increased productivity (and billable time)."

Also surprising were lackluster numbers with respect to the adoption of technologies that address concerns about client confidentiality and security. "While attorneys always voice concerns, we often find that they don't take advantage of technologies that can help them achieve these goals." Only 53% of respondents reported using metadata clean-up software, and only 25% said they used encryption.

Again, large firms were significantly more likely to have embraced these measures. Of the respondents who reported using metadata cleanup software, 78.2% were large firm users, while small firms lagged behind at 21.8%. Similarly, large firm practitioners were about twice as likely as their small firm counterparts to use encryption software.

Adkins Amazed by Document and Practice Management Numbers

The PP-LTI Study also revealed a surprising result about the profession's approach to document management. "It still amazes me," writes Adkins, "that law firms and legal departments have not implemented document management." A similar study, conducted in 2000, indicated that less than 50% of legal professionals did not use a document management system. A decade later, Adkins noted a marked lack of movement toward the embrace of this technology. More than half of respondents — 52% — said that they did not use a document management system. However, adoption rates were significantly higher at large firms where 80% of attorneys reported using a document management system.

With respect to the study's raison d'etre — practice management systems — Adkins found additional surprises. In 2000, only about 25% of legal professionals reported using a case management system. While Adkins "thought that number would have doubled in ten years," the 2010 survey indicated that only 32.7% of respondents were using case, matter, or practice management software. Large firms lead the way although small firms are not far behind.

Survey respondents reported several barriers to the use of a practice management system: 37% of those surveyed said that their "current method works and is not worth changing." Cost was a big concern for 34% of respondents. And, among users and non-users alike, survey respondents identified both the "total cost" and "integration into the firm or law department" as problems.

The PP-LTI Study found that lawyers who were already using a practice management system were significantly less likely to identify cost as an issue, which "seems to indicate that those firms and legal departments using a CMS understand that there is an acceptable cost for using technology," writes Adkins.

Conclusion

The PP-LTI Study provides comprehensive data on the usage of many other technologies, including SaaS, word processing, litigation support programs, and paperless workflow technologies. It also analyzes specific features of practice management system functionality such as its integration with other programs in common usage. Finally, the survey's results address the legal profession's approach to outsourcing, future technology purchases, and the allocation of technology resources within law firms and legal departments. The PP-LTI Study costs $395. You can download an executive summary and review the survey questions used for free.

Read our companion article, New Study Paints Unflattering Portrait of Small Firms.

How to Receive BigLaw
Many large firms have good reputations for their work and bad reputations as places to work. Why? Answering this question requires digging up some dirt, but we do with the best of intentions. Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, BigLaw analyzes the business practices, marketing strategies, and technologies used by the country's biggest law firms in an effort to unearth best and worst practices. The BigLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BiglawWorld | Law Office Management | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

Hamachi Review; In Defense of Solos; Vista Tip; Apple Forever; Another Lunch Faux Pas

By Sara Skiff | Friday, April 9, 2010

Coming today to Fat Friday: David Estes reviews LogMeIn Hamachi, Diana Brodman Summers responds to a recent issue of SmallLaw about solo life, Tom Trottier shares tips for increasing the speed of Windows Vista on a laptop, Jonathan Jackel discusses Apple's software update strategy, and Patricia Joyce adds one more business lunch faux pas to Lee Rosen's recent SmallLaw column on 15 rules of etiquette for business dining. Don't miss this issue.

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Our most serendipitous offering, Fat Friday consists of unsolicited contributions by TechnoLawyer members. You'll no doubt enjoy it because of its mix of interesting topics and genuinely useful knowledge, including brutally honest product reviews and informative how-tos. The Fat Friday newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Coming Attractions | Fat Friday | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Networking/Operating Systems | Technology Industry/Legal Profession | Utilities

Best of ABA TECHSHOW Plus 96 More Articles

By Sara Skiff | Monday, April 5, 2010

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 76 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

Dealing with Email Overload (Part I of III)

A Hands-On Day in the Life with iPad

The Billable Hour Is a Survivor

How to Choose Effective Website Photos and Images

This issue also contains links to every article in the April 2010 issue of Law Technology News. Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Email/Messaging/Telephony | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management

BigLaw: Buyer's Guide to Legal Process Outsourcing

By Marin Feldman | Monday, April 5, 2010

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Originally published on March 29, 2010 in our free BigLaw newsletter.

Corporate law departments and U.K. law firms have embraced legal process outsourcing (LPO), but its reception among U.S. law firms has been decidedly chillier. However, pressure from clients to do more with less has enabled LPO providers to make significant inroads.

I recently sat down to discuss LPO with Jonathan Goldstein, a former large firm lawyer and the current Vice President and Managing Director of Legal Services for Mumbai-based Pangea3, among the world's largest LPO providers. Approximately 20% of Pangea's clientele consists of U.S. firms — a fourfold increase since 2006 when he joined the company.

LPO Is a Fairly Recent Development. If You Had to Pinpoint a Reason for This Phenomenon (Besides the Various Ethics Opinions Permitting Outsourcing), What Would It Be?

Business is global. Companies benefit from outsourcing in every other aspect of their business. Legal was the only part of companies' sales general and administrative spend that consistently went unmanaged and seemed to grow year after year with abandon. Companies finally came to grips with the fact that they could use outsourcing to manage legal expenses the same way they used it to manage other SG&A expenses. LPO has taken off as a result of companies coming around. Law firms are just starting to have that "a ha" moment with outsourcing ... and in many cases only at the urging of clients.

What Reasons Do Your Law Firm Clients Give for Hiring LPO Providers?

Cost savings is the initial attraction. Everybody gets that India is cheaper. But what people are looking for is a high quality product delivered at a price that saves them money. The billable hour model is so maligned because the incentives are all wrong. Because we work mostly on a fixed-fee basis, our dual incentive is to work efficiently and well. People go offshore because they want solid work done at a predictable price. Mere cost savings is often not enough if the quality isn't there.

Speaking of Cost Savings, Just How Much Are We Talking About?

Our clients tell us that they experience a 30-90% savings over what it would cost them to consume these services domestically. And beyond simple cost savings, LPO providers that primarily operate on a flat-fee basis provide certainty to clients. For example, in a document review, once we determine the scope, we can fix the price of the engagement going in. The advantage to the law firm is that if the client has set a litigation budget and the document review bill is suddenly lower, it leaves a lot more cash to spend on substantive tasks performed by the law firm.

When Does It Pay Not To Outsource Legal Services?

The work that goes offshore must be repeatable and scalable. Here's an example. One of the things Pangea gets asked to work on occasionally is a single plaintiff employment case. That's not a great case to offshore because it takes too much ramp up time. But if that same case were to evolve into a massive wage and hour litigation, that's when it would make sense to get us involved. We mostly deal in the hundreds of thousands and millions of pages. We typically don't do anything for projects that involve thousands of pages. In the latter case, what you really need is the on-demand, as-needed availability of a law firm.

Many of the Country's Oldest, Largest and Most Prestigious Law Firms Have Operated the Same Way for a Hundred Years, Which Has More or Less Worked. Why Should They Now Change?

Historically, law firms used to have all the power and the in-house departments used to cower. But now, LPO providers talk directly to the corporate clients, and they don't need much convincing because they already experience the benefits of outsourcing in all other aspects of their businesses. Law firms are being told by their clients that they have to use outsourcing. Clients have the pen. Clients sign the checks. If outsourcing is something you're thinking about and not taking action on, you're going to be left behind. LPO is not some fad, like lava lamps or sideburns. It's not going away.

What Are the Three Most Important Things Law Firms Should Look for When Choosing an LPO Provider?

First, select a provider with a proven track record of success. Make sure they have good, solid references with Fortune 500 companies and national firms that look and feel like your clients and your firm. Quality clientele indicates that the provider knows how to price matters correctly and deliver.

Second, select a provider with a large team of US-admitted lawyers who have been through the ringer and understand how law firms work.

Third, select an organization that has a good cultural fit with your firm. Make sure that you can have a real conversation with the provider, and that you don't feel like you're having a talk with a space alien.

If You're a Managing Partner at a Law Firm, What Questions Should You Ask Prospective LPO Providers?

First, law firms should ask, "have you worked with us before?" You would not believe how often partners are unaware that we have worked with others at their firm. You should also ask about relevant experience and whether you have clients in common, and assess whether there's a cultural fit.

Scalability is also important. You want to work with a provider that has enough heft to do the work and has enough managerial talent to scale with you as your engagement and the provider's other clients demand more.

Factors that may preclude use of a particular provider include whether the matter requires non-English language needs or whether it involves civil law jurisdictions. Prospective clients have also asked us about supervisory ratios, turnover, IT and physical security, business processes, and insurance.

Three Popular Locations to Outsource Legal Work Are South Africa, India, and the Philippines. Does It Make a Difference Where the Work Is Performed in Terms of Lawyer Quality, Work Product, and Cost to the Law Firm?

Yes. The Philippines has a real scalability problem with its workforce. Many of the lawyers who are performing the work there are moonlighting because the number of available lawyers there is so low. The Philippine domestic legal marketplace consumes nearly all the available Philippine lawyer talent, so you wind up competing with domestic work.

Many London firms have been working with providers in South Africa, but it's largely an IP market. It's an immature market for the provision of litigation and corporate work.

In India, there are one million lawyers with 100,000 in Mumbai alone, which explains why we have set up shop there. The offshore work in India is top of the market work, so you don't compete with domestic demand the way you do in the Philippines and South Africa.

What Steps Should a Law Firm Take to Prevent Against the Unauthorized Practice of Law When Engaging a LPO Provider? Do Providers Have Internal Procedures to Protect Against This Problem?

Good ones do. Any solid provider will be guided by the August 2008 ABA opinions and the individual state bar association ethics opinions on legal outsourcing. Providers should never deliver their work product to the end consumer of that work product if that person is not a lawyer. Providers should be at privity with an admitted lawyer in the jurisdiction and should deliver their work under that lawyer's supervision and direction. The supervision should be meaningful and consistent, but need not be constant. There are providers that deliver work directly to non-lawyers, which is a disaster waiting to happen.

What About Confidentiality?

In terms of confidentiality, there should be non-use, non-compete, non-solicit, and non-disclosure agreements in place between the provider's employees and the provider, between the provider's employees and you (the law firm), and between the provider's employees and the (corporate) client, should the client wish.

Any Other Advice?

Be wary of providers using people who do not speak English, who are not lawyers, or who are not even employees of the organization. If a prospective provider won't let you meet the people who will do the work, it's a huge red flag.

How to Receive BigLaw
Many large firms have good reputations for their work and bad reputations as places to work. Why? Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, BigLaw goes deep undercover inside some of the country's biggest law firms. But we don't just dish up the dirt. We also mine it for best and worst practices and other nuggets of knowledge. The BigLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BiglawWorld | Law Office Management

Choice Management: Techniques and Tools for Making Better Decisions

By Sara Skiff | Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Coming today to TechnoFeature: Lawyers and technologists spend lots of mental energy dealing with choices. We ponder these choices, pose them to others, and participate as advisers and advocates. While often quickly resolved, choices permeate our business and personal lives. By many accounts they are becoming more frequent and complex. Periodically, some choices become the focus of prolonged deliberation and debate. Unfortunately, many law firms and corporate legal departments don't use technology creatively or aggressively to support an activity as ubiquitous as decision making. In this TechnoFeature article, consultant Marc Lauritsen who builds expert systems and helps law firms implement sound decision-making processes explores techniques and software tools designed to help you make better choices. If you've never heard of "choice management" before, Marc will help get you started in this important new discipline.

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Our flagship newsletter never disappoints thanks to its in-depth reporting by leading legal technology and practice management experts, many of whom have become "household names" in the legal profession. It's in TechnoFeature that you'll find our oft-quoted formal product reviews and accompanying TechnoScore ratings. The TechnoFeature newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Automation/Document Assembly/Macros | Collaboration/Knowledge Management | Coming Attractions | Law Office Management | TechnoFeature

Perfect Legal Storm Plus 72 More Articles

By Sara Skiff | Monday, March 29, 2010

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 73 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

Fastcase Missing Hundreds of Citations?

Droid v. iPhone: Giving BlackBerry a Run For Lawyers' Money

Cheap and Fast May Define the Law Firm of the Future

Sell Your Legal Skills as Art, Not Labor

Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

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BigLaw: It's About Time We Talked About Overpartnering

By Liz Kurtz | Monday, March 29, 2010

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Originally published on March 22, 2010 in our free BigLaw newsletter.

The economic downturn left a lot of casualties in its wake. Legal staff, associates, summer programs, car service, art budgets, breakfast, lunches and dinners … even entire law firms. But, despite the considerable ink spilled reporting on layoffs, deferrals, and cost-cutting at the nation's law firms, chatter about the uncomfortable matter of partner reductions remains relatively hushed. Until now.

Law Firms (Quietly) Begin Purging Partners

Recently, a report released by consultants at Hildebrandt Baker Robbins and the Private Bank division of Citigroup made it official: law firms are "overpartnered."

"During 2010," the report concludes, "many firms are likely to begin addressing this issue using a variety of tools including sharper compensation differentiations, early retirement packages, and 'tough love' conversations. We expect to see a general paring back of the ranks of income partners across the market, as well as a weeding out of marginal equity partners."

In the past weeks, several articles in the legal press have focused on the subject of "partner purges. This coverage and the Hildebrandt report gives voice to an issue long discussed behind closed doors. Although some firms have embraced transparency in their quest to reduce the associate ranks (while others have been criticized for "stealth layoffs"), information about the plight of partners remains scarce.

The reluctance of partners to discuss the phenomenon, whether with respect to their own fates or those of their colleagues, is understandable. Nonetheless, we found two partners willing to tackle the issue head on provided we not disclose their identities.

"I'm secure about my own position," said one equity partner at a large Connecticut firm, "but I take part in hiring decisions and sit on my firm's executive compensation committee. Do I think that partners can realistically expect to escape this recession unscathed? Of course not. Do I think that some partners should be shielded from the consequences of their own failure — or inability — to perform? Frankly: no. But it's such a sensitive issue that no one is willing to discuss it outside of the firm."

Another partner, who works at a large national firm notes that firms have been addressing the "overpartnering" phenomenon discreetly for quite some time. "Firms are trying to serve a number of masters," he says. "Clients prefer to have partners work on their cases, but they're demanding lower rates and overall bills. At the same time, firms have substantially reduced leverage, and when leverage goes down, there's just less money to go around … and the partners with a good book of business and a stable of clients will go elsewhere if they're not paid enough."

As one way of maintaining (or perhaps manipulating) the firm ecosystem, he says, many have been quietly throwing partners out, de-equitizing, or shifting them to Of Counsel positions to preserve the pie for other members.

Not surprisingly, says the partner, whether "purging" or "culling" partners is ultimately good or bad, depends on the particulars. "If the firm is really bleeding, it might not be such a bad thing," he said. "And getting rid of weak performers is classic 'survival of the fittest.' But if too many partners are let go, it can be very traumatic to the practice group or the firm as a whole — like cutting off an arm to save the body."

New Business Models Needed, Not Just Fewer Partners

What the partners interviewed for this column hope to see happen next has less to do with the bottom line and more to do with the channels of communication. "I think we need to open up the topic for discussion," said the partner at the national firm.

The Connecticut partner agrees. "We're facing the prospect of painful contraction in the legal profession," he observed. "How firms will balance commodity versus specialty work, whether certain partners would be better off at boutique or smaller-market firms, and how to operate efficiently in this environment are all issues worth discussing. I'd like to see more partners talk honestly about how we, as a profession, can put out heads together and figure out how to provide legal services, make money, and work in the environments that we're each temperamentally and intellectually best suited for. Those are some pretty big challenges, and we need all the mental capital we can devote to exploring them."

With that, BigLaw readers, we open the floor to you. Whether you're an equity or income partner, "retired" partner, Of Counsel, or aspiring partner, please reply with your thoughts on this issue. Or if you'd prefer anonymity contact me directly.

How to Receive BigLaw
Many large firms have good reputations for their work and bad reputations as places to work. Why? Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, BigLaw goes deep undercover inside some of the country's biggest law firms. But we don't just dish up the dirt. We also mine it for best and worst practices and other nuggets of knowledge. The BigLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BiglawWorld | Law Office Management
 
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