Tag Archives: strategy

Awareness Is the Key to Avoiding Firm Failures

Law firm failures are rarely caused by any one thing, according John Cussons, director at Huron Legal. In fact, he says that it’s a combination of three interlinked factors that often brings firms down, namely: lack of a clear strategic plan, financial mismanagement, and failure to retain key people.

Failures, he explains, can be divided into two categories: the catastrophic ones that get all the press and the failure of firms to compete in their marketplace. To Cussons, it’s the second type of failure—the failure to compete—that firms must guard against, as it can be the forerunner to catastrophic failure.

“With catastrophic failures, what’s often reported is financial mismanagement,” Cussons says. “But if you go far enough back, you can see that it’s actually a combination of both financial and strategic mismanagement.”

It’s this combination of financial and strategic mismanagement that causes the loss of key people, which is what causes firms to unravel. “The partners begin to leave in droves, and it becomes unsustainable,” says Cussons.

So what can you do? Develop clear strategic and a financial plans.

Strategically, you need to be aware of where you are now in the market and to agree about where you want to go. Define the clients you want to serve, what you want to do for them and at what level. That may sound easy, but Cussons says that many of the firms he consults for have a distorted view of their current place in the market, which is further impacted by a partnership often unable to agree on its market standing and therefore unable to decide on how to change to achieve their desired future position.

“You’ve got to decide where you want to get to, and you’ve got to be clear about where you are now,” Cussons says.

Financially, you need to ensure your firm is managing its ongoing profitability correctly, he says, noting that many firms don’t link profitability to performance. This is a very critical issue that many firms simply don’t get right.

“That’s what has let a lot of firms down, I think,” he says. “Many partners in firms all over the world don’t truly understand how they make profits. They understand it conceptually, but they don’t understand which levers to pull to improve profitability at matter and practice level…. [But], to be fair to the majority of partners, business skills such as profitability management were not part of their training.”

Only once you have the strategic and financial elements in place can you be truly competitive in your market. You then need to create an internal structure that supports your overall business plan.

“In the case of both strategy and financial management it’s about awareness,” he says. “You need data, you need good reporting, you need a management team and partners who really understand what they need to be looking for, both in the strategic sense and in the financial sense. And then you need a management and leadership team and an organizational structure that actually allows the firm to react to changes in the market or the firm’s circumstances.”

Want to know more? Cussons further explores the causes of law firm failures in the West LegalEdcenter webinar “Why Firms Fail: Identifying Early Warning Signs Based On Past Law Firm Failures” and how to avoid financial failure in “Delivering Financial Success: The Importance of Managing Profitability and the Role of Legal Project Management.”

Monday Clicks: Social Media Marketing, Business Development

Ah…social media. Does anyone over the age of 20 really know how to use it? Maybe. Maybe not. But that doesn’t mean you can’t learn which sites in-house counsel use to determine hiring and how lawyers, firms and potential customers use online media to develop a plan that pays off.

  • Along the same lines of wanting to remain invisible, an Asscociate’s Mind post says that people “prefer not to be broadcasters,” suggesting that all those sharing buttons on your posts may be for naught. When readers do share, it’s targeted to a specific person.
  • Accountants make better use of social media overall than do lawyers, according to a U.K. report by Living Ratings. Twitter is the most popular platform used by lawyers—but firms rely on retweets and linked content, not original posts. The report also found that Eversheds is the law firm with the greatest social media presence, which shows that a sector-focused social networking push can pay off.
  • Which platforms “make” customers buy? It turns out that customers who want to buy stocks gravitate toward stock-specific sites, so it stands to reason that people looking for a lawyer will do the same and sign on to “domain-specific social networks.” Dan Schleifer details how his company used those sites to understand customer “needs and develop product features to meet those needs, as well as to understand the market dynamics themselves.”

Monday Clicks: Law Firm Business Basics

From building your business to managing your marketing plan and payroll to dealing with the press, there are many facets to running a law firm. We present a few basics below:

  • Are you a new attorney who needs to build up business? An ABA podcast is here to help. In “Building business as a new attorney,” Stephanie Francis Ward moderates a discussion of how young lawyers can cultivate current connections and turn them into future clients.
  • “Differentiation is perhaps the hardest concept for lawyers to embrace,” writes Sally Schmidt for Attorney at Work. But standing out from the crowd by “promoting niche or subspecialty areas within your practice can be one of the most effective things you can do to build your business.”
  • It’s time to give your marketing plan a spring cleaning, says Small Firm Innovation. In “Got to Give It Up” they offer several tips on how to gussy up your marketing, from spending more on web ads to better use of your blog and making sure your site is viewable on smartphones.
  • The press isn’t your enemy, though it may seem like it if you don’t know how to handle them. Above the Law offers several tips on dealing with the press, including how to field calls, build relationships you can use to your advantage and that you may need a publicist.
  • Attracting and keeping clients is only part of the how-to-grow-profits puzzle; managing your payroll is another. Divorce Discourse says that your payroll is key to profitable growth, noting that you need to start monitoring it now because “it’s really ugly if you have to fix it after you’ve grown, and fixing it can set you back by several years.”

Q1 PMI: Drop in Demand, Rise in Worked Rates

Demand was down, yet worked rates were up in the first quarter of 2013. These findings brought about a 6-point drop in the Thomson Reuters Peer Monitor Economic Index (PMI) to 50, marking the fifth decline in the past seven quarters.

The PMI reports that there was a 3.4 percent drop in overall demand and a 3.1 percent increase in worked rates. Productivity was also down, seeing a 4.6 percent drop. Direct and overhead expense rates were low at 1.8 percent and 2.8 percent, respectively—but were not low enough to offset the drop in demand.

By practice area demand, bankruptcy saw the largest decline at 9 percent. Litigation was down 3.7 percent, and IP litigation fell 6.8 percent. The PMI notes that the declines in litigation has the largest impact in the fall of overall demand, as the practice areas account for nearly 40 percent of total billings. The PMI also notes:

Demand patterns have become somewhat erratic in recent years. In 2011 and 2012, demand saw fairly sizeable jumps in the first quarter; they gradually trailed off as the year wore on. So, first quarter results do not necessarily presage how the rest of the year may go.

The declines by practice area are:

  • Labor and employment: -0.4 percent
  • Real estate: -1.8 percent
  • Litigation: -3.7 percent
  • Corporate (all): -4.4 percent
  • Tax: -5.9 percent
  • IP litigation: -6.8 percent
  • Bankruptcy: -9 percent

For PMI’s full report, which includes performance by market area and further analysis, download it at the Peer Monitor site or in the sidebar link to the right of this post.

Dissolution Imminent? How to Handle it Well

Sometimes law firms fail. Sometimes it’s due to economic factors, but more often it’s because “law firms are fragile organizations that are held together by the will of the partners,” according to Michael D. Short in a LawVision post “Advice for Law Firms in Serious Trouble.”

“Many firms,” Short writes, “are one or two key defections away from the start of a downward spiral in confidence that can quickly pull any law firm apart.”

What can firms do in the face of imminent failure? There are three options, according to Short:

  1. A rapid, radical restructuring.
  2. A “savior acquirer” law firm that absorbs your firm into theirs.
  3. Dissolution.

While option No. 2 is cited as the “path of least resistance,” neither it nor restructuring may be possible. Dissolution, therefore, remains the only option. Once a firm has decided to wind down, Short says that it’s best to do it quickly, without declaring bankruptcy (if possible) and permanently.

Yann Geron, a partner at Fox Rothschild LLP who co-authored the LawVision article, offered further advice on how to proactively manage the dissolution and maintain credibility with creditors, avoid a leadership vacuum and successfully transition clients to new firms as the billing partners move those firms.

Read the full article here.