It is part of my job to make sure I am up to speed on all the economic movements of firms here and abroad as this economic downturn has not trickled down but headed full- fledged into the legal industry. Each day I read article after article about associate and staff layoffs at firms of various sizes and peer status. In addition I attend conferences and listen to Managing Partners, CFOs, and other C-level staff address how to combat this downturn through various actions used to cut costs. At most conferences there has been an inevitable line of presentations on reducing overhead along with addressing the headcounts of staff and salaried timekeepers.   If I have to hear about controlling space planning and technology expenditures anymore I think my head might spin. 

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Strategic Leverage: Just as Important as Ever
More Partner Income

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It is part of my job to make sure I am up to speed on all the economic movements of firms here and abroad as this economic downturn has not trickled down but headed full- fledged into the legal industry. Each day I read article after article about associate and staff layoffs at firms of various sizes and peer status. In addition I attend conferences and listen to Managing Partners, CFOs, and other C-level staff address how to combat this downturn through various actions used to cut costs. At most conferences there has been an inevitable line of presentations on reducing overhead along with addressing the headcounts of staff and salaried timekeepers.   If I have to hear about controlling space planning and technology expenditures anymore I think my head might spin. 
I speak with CFOs all the time and the prevailing theme is that budgets have been cut so much recently that the line is very thin on providing appropriate support to the primary operations of the firm. I am not saying that these measures of analyzing overhead aren’t important. In fact I agree they are and should be done on a consistent basis, not just when there is an economic downturn. 
Most consultants I have spoken with all agree, if you had no strategic plan in place before the recession you are probably too late. Since many firms fall into that category they have fallen into an immediate cost cutting tactical strategy that almost completely focuses on the easiest things to cut (staff, associates, technology, etc.) In some cases the staff and associate cuts are valid in that the recession has produced a prime opportunity to do what was probably overdue in eliminating poor performers. For other cases it is the perceived method of addressing what aims to be a possible rough year or two. Unfortunately I feel that this method of reducing costs is shortsighted and evasive of one of the key detriments to firm performance within an economic downturn, underperforming partners.
Let’s address the shortsighted nature first. In the early 90s the legal industry felt the effects of a recession that lead to mass layoffs of associates and staff. As time passed and the economy improved those firms found difficulty in re-staffing properly for the growing legal work they were receiving. Gone were the associates who were already trained and ready to be the next leaders of the firm leaving a re-tooling effort that could have been avoided. By purging large numbers of associates it mortgages the future of the law firm, leaving a void to fill when the economy turns.  This, despite the fact that when it comes to strategic leverage, a well levered firm can be much more profitable. 
Strategic Leverage
Below is an extremely simplified view of the effects of leverage. Assuming 100% utilization and 1800 budgeted hours the impact of a shift in the non-partner to partner ratio of 1:1 to 3:1 clearly would reduce revenue, a point that is often used to counter the initiative of leverage, but the key statistic for the legal industry, Profits per Partner, increases. This is generally due to the higher percentage return that associates bring in. Another component that is not even captured in the model is a likely reduction in overhead. This sort of analysis should be done by firms on a consistent basis regardless of economy to find the right mix. You obviously need partners for reasons that anyone reading this blog should be aware of but leveraging is a true way to improve firm profitability. That fact reinforces the shortsighted nature of the removal of staff and associates for cost cutting purposes. You just cannot cut and cut all the way down into profitability.

Addressing the Economic Slowdown through Underperforming Partners

This leads into the other concerning trend I have seen. The legal industry is not focusing enough effort on underperforming partners.   As mentioned by my colleague Bo in his forward looking view of leverage last week, smart firms are the ones who will take this opportunity to deal with underperforming partners as well as associates. But we’re just not seeing it here in the US. 
I have often wondered why that is the case, but from many discussions with managing partners, the prevailing theme seems to be a feeling that by disturbing the “glue” it would show weakness and perhaps cause unrest among the other Partners. At face value I can understand, but the examples are before us where turning a blind eye to underperforming partners have contributed to successful partners actually leaving firms and causing those firms to fall into decline. I think the point is that subjectively most partnerships have a general idea on who is performing and who is not within the ranks. Technology and consulting can bring data to back those beliefs, but if nothing is done about the underperformers, the over performers may develop resentment as their pocketbooks get hit. 

Within recent weeks we have seen several firms release partners in the UK. Linklaters just announced a reduction in their partnership as has Addleshaw Goddard. The Times Online recently spoke with Nigel Boardman one of the UK law firm Slaughter and May’s top partners. He had several great quotes that illustrate this need to address underperforming partners, “I don’t think it follows that a downturn in work means that you cut your associates…If you have to cut, cut your partner profits and even your partners…good lawyers are hard to find.” Mr. Boardman is addressing that thinning the junior ranks will leave firms without qualified talent as the years go by and that is not a good long term strategy.

 

Profitability of law firm is driven by several factors, but the seemingly elephant in the room (cutting underperforming partners) seems to be a factor that firms have difficulty addressing. It could date to years gone by when partners were considered untouchable. Yet the recessions of the past have changed that as has the changing model of the law firm. This recession is weighing on the legal industry and those firms that finally address partners and practice areas that have not been performing to firm standards and make the move to strategically shift their firm for the long term are going to come out ahead when the economy turns the corner.
--Russ Haskin
Russ Haskin is Director of Consulting for Redwood Analytics/Lexis Nexis.

Posted Wed, Feb 25 2009 12:54 PM by Admin

Comments

Admin wrote re: Strategic Leverage: Just as Important as Ever
on Wed, Feb 25 2009 3:46 PM

Excellent article Russ.