15 May 2025

Legal Metrics In The Law Department

In the law department, legal metrics provide the foundation for measuring value, success, performance, and a range of other criteria. As quantitative measurements, legal metrics evaluate the effectiveness of legal operations across various indicators.

What Are Legal Metrics

Legal metrics are measurement standards that help legal operations professionals uncover data. Legal departments function more efficiently when metrics are established. Once data is incorporated into the functionality and success of the legal department, more strategic and data-driven decisions can be made. It becomes rote, something necessary and ingrained in legal department operations. Overall department performance improves when the legal team and operations professionals use legal metrics at the core of law department operations.

Here is a list of some basic legal metrics across data points that provide the backbone of law department success and maturity.

  • Volume of Work: This quantitative metric tracks the number of legal matters, how many contracts are open or closed, and the projects being managed in the legal department. Workload management helps with future forecasting and whether the current levels of people power are sufficient.
  • Turnaround: How much time is required to manage a legal task? Or, what is the cycle time of a contract, and how long does it take to resolve a legal matter? Measuring time means measuring efficiency to complete tasks, matters, projects, contracts, and more.
  • Legal Spend: Addressing and assessing legal spend is likely the most critical of legal metrics. As a cost center, the law department budget is set for cash out, the expenses paid to outside counsel and vendors. There are various metrics to measure legal spend data year over year. All chief legal and chief financial officers want to know about legal spend budgets and whether the law department spent under budget or over. In addition, beyond just measuring legal spend, looking at overall success, e.g., win rate, is tantamount to the value the law department delivers.
  • Risk Management: In the last 10 years, privacy regulations have become more prevalent, especially in the UK and California. Those companies managing consumer products in a B-to-C capacity need to adhere to these regulations. In the pharmaceutical industry, nearly all U.S. states have their own regulations about prescription drugs. Law departments must comply with these regulatory issues or risk legal turbulence.
  • Outcomes: Not all legal matters reach a jury trial. There are case settlements that can occur instead. Measuring the outcomes and planning for the eventual opportunity of a settlement might be a moving target as a legal metric; however, outcomes go hand in hand with managing risk and legal spend.
  • Resources: Talent recruitment is an endless task in a legal department. Data-driven metrics analyze the volume of work against the talent needed to complete that work qualitatively. The resulting productivity metric helps legal department leadership staff the legal team against legal matters.

Trends in Legal Spend Affect Law Department Success

In the recently released LexisNexis® CounselLink® 2025 Trends Report: Benchmark Metrics to Empower Legal Cost Management, data showed that Large Law partner hourly rates continue to rise, 5.1%, marking the second-highest increase on record over 12 trends reports. This implies that legal departments face a critical juncture: continue paying rising outside counsel fees without question, or implement creative billing by project or alternative fees, for example.

Corporations may regretfully pay higher rates to law firms; however, bringing all the matter management in-house isn’t a solution, either. Studies indicate that organizations are bringing more matter management in-house, which means larger law departments. Legal spend is often considered the marker of law department success; yet, the higher that amount is, the less successful the law department becomes.

Why Are Legal Metrics Important?

A company without data is a company that will eventually fail. Without data, there is no analysis; without analytics, there is no strategic improvement. Legal metrics play a critical role in the law department, especially since legal departments do not generate revenue.

Legal metrics are important in the legal department for these various reasons:

  • Objectivity. To evaluate objectively and transparently, data-driven analysis provides the basis for such evaluations. Legal operations professionals seek ways to assess performance without guesswork.
  • Information is Power. Leadership, armed with data, can make strategic decisions for the law department. Those decisions may be about a budget for new software, whether to hire more lawyers, and which firm is the best choice to be a new outside counsel partner.
  • Manage Costs. Anything associated with legal department expenses is generally oriented to legal spend. Managing these costs is critical to overall department success. Previously set metrics define how costs are managed and budgets forecasted. Ultimately, cost management is about expense management and finding ways to reduce those expenses.
  • Adding Value. The first step to adding value in the legal department is measuring performance. Legal metrics provide the data to do that. It becomes easier to deliver analytical reporting with a culture of accountability.
  • Measured Growth. Companies don’t grow overnight; however, with a strategic plan, metrics and decision-making, there is an opportunity for a legal department to deliver measured growth. Data from legal metrics helps monitor progress, identify inefficiencies and guide improvements.

Contribution to Legal Department Maturity

Legal metrics are key drivers of a mature legal department. To establish goals to advance legal department maturity, legal operations professionals should consider the following:

  • Establish Benchmarks: Define and track key performance indicators (KPIs) to allow legal departments to benchmark their performance internally and against industry standards.
  • Promoting Process Optimization: Data-driven insights encourage regular process reviews and refinements, leading to a smoother and more effective operation.
  • Enhancing Strategic Alignment: By aligning metrics with business goals, legal departments can ensure that their activities support broader organizational objectives.
  • Driving Technology Adoption: The need for accurate metrics often prompts the integration of legal tech and analytics tools, advancing the department’s overall capability.
  • Supporting Strategic Communication: Quantifiable data makes it easier to communicate the value and efficiency of the legal department to executive leadership and other stakeholders.

Legal metrics are more than just numbers—they are essential tools for assessing performance, driving continuous improvement and aligning legal operations with an organization’s strategic goals. By systematically tracking and analyzing these metrics, legal departments can mature into more efficient, proactive and strategic units that contribute significantly to overall business success. Contact us to establish legal metrics in your law department.