Lawyers: Understand the Math

I sometimes hear from young (and sometimes not so young) lawyers who do not understand the math that supports their compensation in a law firm. They know that they are unhappy and they believe that deserve more. They are thinking of answering the romantic call of the recruiter. However, they often do not have a deep understanding (or any understanding) of how their contribution is measured by the firm, apart from the obvious factor of tracking billable hours.

This is frequently the firm’s fault for a variety of reasons which I will not get into right now. Instead, I would like to focus my musings today on what lawyers should understand about their own financial contribution to their law firm. With that understanding they will be better equipped to understand whether the value that they bring to the firm is being under appreciated by the firm or overestimated by themselves.

This may not be exciting stuff. But it is kind of crucial for lawyers who are devoting their mental energy to trying to decide whether to jump to another firm for a better financial deal. At least some of the lawyers who do that are going to learn the truth that ‘wherever you go, the contradictions remain the same.’  And those people may find that they would have been better off understanding their financial contribution and working to improve it rather than jumping into another fire.

So, let’s get started on some things that every lawyer should know about law firm economics and their own performance:

  1. Law firms, like every business, relate their costs to their revenue. The traditional approach is that an associate should bill three times their salary. The idea is that one-third of revenue goes to overhead and one-third to partner profits. Note that there are some who say that this has changed over time and that the new standard may be that associates should bill four or five times their salary.
  2. Of course the correct relationship between billings and salary will vary from firm to firm depending on their overheads. Perhaps salaries should be adjusted upwards in a Covid and post-Covid world where some law firm overheads have decreased with the elimination of many in-person marketing events, expenses related to clients attending at the firm’s offices, and in some cases the reduction of office space. Just don’t expect the partners to be instigating that conversation.
  3. As a starting point, every associate should figure out how their salary measures up compared to their own billings. If they are over-contributing, perhaps there is room for a salary increase. If they are not, they may have less leverage to ask for one. Start with asking whether you are billing more than three times your salary.
  4. Most lawyers have a billable hour target set by the firm. Multiply the target by your hourly rate. Divide by three. The result may come close to your salary. If it does, it will confirm that the firm’s expectations align with one long-accepted measure for determining associate compensation. If the result is significantly higher or lower than your salary, try to figure out what the firm’s thinking is in setting your target. Do they think that for their business, you should be dividing by 4 or 5 instead? Are their overheads much higher or lower than the norm? Are they particularly generous? Are they particularly greedy?
  5. Is your target reasonable? Do you think you can achieve it? If your health, values, and life priorities are such that you cannot make the target, perhaps you are at the wrong firm. Let’s be clear about lifestyle. I personally am a great believer in working less and enjoying life more. However, that comes with earning less. From the law firm’s perspective, those who put in more billable hours earn more than those who don’t. They are not going to pay for your lifestyle choices. Come to terms with it.
  6. If your target is reasonable and you still struggle to meet it, you have to understand why. There are good reasons (which should not drag down your compensation), bad reasons (which should suppress your compensation) and neutral reasons which should be up for discussion with management. Good reasons may include the firm requiring you that do other stuff, such as mentoring, marketing or administration beyond managing your own practice. Bad reasons may include poor docketing skills, excess write-offs of work in process or accounts receivable that you do not control, and being instructed by partners not to record time on certain matters. An example of a neutral reason may be being required to take on files that are outside of your expertise or to develop a new practice area. That type of investment benefits both you and the firm. There should perhaps be a discussion about who should pay for it.
  7. If you are not good at docketing, billing, and collecting all of your time, get good at it before you even think about complaining about your salary. In my experience, the simple fact is that partners care about what you bill, not how hard you work. If you are working hard but not recording and billing your time, you don’t have much of a leg to stand on to complain about your compensation and the situation is unlikely to be much better wherever else you may go.
  8. Every lawyer should understand their write-offs of work in process and accounts receivable. If you are the person making the decisions, you have little or no excuse if these write-offs are excessive. If someone else is doing that, the question arises as to whether they are all being handled in a reasonable manner. Good mentors will keep you in the loop and explain why the write-offs are being made so that you can learn to minimize them. If they are being made without your input and without explanation, you should try to fix that.
  9. A related issue concerns credit risk. Are partners requiring you to work for clients who do not pay? If so, are you getting paid for your hours anyway? On the other hand, if you are making the credit decisions or failing to get financial retainers, it’s on you!
  10. You also have to understand your billable rate. In some specialties, hourly rates are lower than in other specialties. For example, rates for employment lawyers tend to be lower than rates for tax lawyers. If you are in a lower billing specialty, either suck it up and stop complaining or change areas of practice.
  11. Who is setting your billable rate and how are they setting it? Are your clients willing to pay more? If so, are you being allowed to charge them more?
  12. Lawyers should also understand the financial metrics of their own practice, including things such as: (i) do you work with clerks who bill under their own names but who would not be able to do their work but for your supervision?(ii) is your collection rate much better or worse than that of others? and (iii) does your work allow other lawyers to do their work and bill large amounts that the firm would not be able to attract without your specialty?
  13. With respect to overheads, lawyers should know the answers to the following questions:  Do you use significantly more or less overhead than others in the firm? For example, do you share a legal assistant with three other people while others have a legal assistant for themselves? Does your practice require that the firm have on staff a very highly paid legal assistant or law clerk while others use junior staff? Is the firm spending a lot of resources to market your practice? Someone has to pay for all of this stuff. It may be you.
  14. If you are not making your target because there is a shortage of work, you have to ask yourself whose fault that is. If you are in your first three years or so, that is probably the firm’s fault. After that, it becomes more and more your fault each year that you continue to practice without building your own client base.
  15. Another important issue is about client credits. Do you bring in business? If so, are you being compensated for doing that? Assume, for example, that you brought in $1,000,000 of business, some done by you and some done by others. In some firms that I am familiar with, that would be worth $100,000 more salary (10%) that the same person would earn just doing work that the partners brought in.
  16. Let’s talk about building a client base. With the exception of some large firms who may want their associates to focus on serving the firm’s clients instead of bringing in more clients, most firms want their lawyers to bring in business, especially after their first few years of practice. This leads to many questions that each lawyer must ask, the answers to which they have to understand. Some of these are:
    • Does your firm record and track the business you bring in and compensate you for it in a measurable way?
    • Does your firm keep you completely busy doing the firm’s work but still complain that you are not bringing in your own clients?
    • Does your firm have a system to give you client origination credit for long-time firm clients for whom you now manage the relationship, or will you only get compensated for that by leaving the firm and taking the client with you?
    • Does your compensation system reward you for bringing in clients and delegating the work to others?
    • Does your firm support your marketing efforts with training, administrative support, and a marketing budget?
  17. On the topic of developing a client base, every lawyer has to understand that there are many firms which will not make people partners unless, at a minimum, they are self-sufficient in terms of bringing in work, and typically they would be expected to feed themselves and others. If you are not developing your own client base and you are not satisfied with what you are earning as a “grinder,” you have two choices. One choice is to learn to market and bring in business. It is fun and rewarding, and I am talking as someone who sucked at it in the beginning, learned how to do it and made a lot of money doing it. Alternatively, find a firm that will load you up with enough work to keep you busy. BUT, if you chose option two, make sure you really want to work that hard and that you don’t end up in a situation where the work dries up and your job is at risk because you don’t have your own client base.

Here is the bottom line. Lawyers often do not understand the economics of their practice. However, at the same time, they are frequently unhappy with their compensation. We tell our clients that we cannot form an opinion on their situation until we understand all of the facts surrounding their problem. The same thing goes for us.

The Hireback Rate on Bay Street is Freakishly High

At the largest firms in Toronto, 98 percent of articling students have been hired back

This year, the hireback rate on Bay Street reached an all-time peak: 16 of the largest law offices in Toronto hired back 98 percent of their articling students. Practically every articling student on Bay Street — who didn’t opt out of the hireback process — will return as an associate in the fall.

This data comes from PrecedentJD’s exclusive 2019 Hireback Watch. For the past 11 years, this magazine has collected hireback numbers from firms across Toronto. We also publish a breakdown of the 16 largest firms, where we rank them based on their most-recent hireback rate.

This year’s ultra-high hireback rate is a deviation from the past. When we first collected this data, a decade ago, a couple firms consistently scored above 90 percent, but the rest hired back between 50 and 85 percent of their students.

Over the past four years, that average percentage has steadily crept up: 82 percent in 2016, 89 percent in 2017 and 91 percent in 2018. But to reach 98 percent is stunning.

What’s behind this year’s spike? One answer is that firms have adopted a new hiring philosophy. “We’re trying to be careful in who we hire into our student program, with a view to hiring everyone back,” says Mark Ledwell, the managing partner at the Toronto office of Gowling WLG. This year, his firm posted its first 100-percent hireback rate since the beginning of the Hireback Watch.

The legal economy has also been strong over the past half-decade. “So far, there’s no sign of letting up,” says Ledwell. “We’re finding that our students have been really busy and have been more integrated in the practice than before.”

There’s another noteworthy trend in the numbers: most firms have, over time, reduced the size of their articling-student cohorts. In 2009, the largest firms in Toronto took on 325 students; this year, that number has fallen to 265. As a result, firms don’t have to hire back as many students to have a high overall percentage.

“It’s not surprising that the hireback ratio is higher, because you’re starting with a smaller pool,” says Craig Lockwood, a partner and the chair of the student committee at Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP. “Gone are the days when, 10 or 15 years ago, certain firms would hire twice as many students as they needed and let the cream rise to the top.” At Osler, the plan has always been to match the size of its student class with its demand for associates. This explains why the firm typically posts a perfect — or near-perfect — hireback rate.

This year also saw a small uptick in the total number of first-year associates hired back. One year ago, the largest firms in Toronto brought on 205 first years; this year, that number is up to 238. “I’m not surprised to see those numbers,” says Lesa Ong, a legal recruiter at NegataConnex. “The market is buoyant right now, so firms have been really busy. But they’ve also been very lean on the mid-to-senior associate level.”

According to Ong, a growing number of associates have started to leave their firms before they reach a mid-career point. That means firms may be hiring more first-year associates in anticipation of attrition down the line.

Lockwood at Osler views the latest hiring season as a positive sign for the future. “It’s actually a great time to be entering the profession, because it’s very, very busy and firms are hiring wisely,” he says. “That reflects well on the students and means they’ll have a better experience because of it.”

 

Corporate Counsel

PURPOSE OF THE POSITION

To provide legal advice to the businesses of ABC Inc. (the “Company”) to ensure protection of the Company’s assets, interests and rights. The Legal Department’s role is to provide management, senior executives and the board of directors with legal advice and opinions necessary to make informed business decisions; to ensure that all legal requirements are being met by the Company; and to facilitate the lawful accomplishment of the Company’s business goals and objectives.

The Corporate Counsel must be customer service driven and have a good working relationship with internal clients and the personality and skills necessary to work effectively with outside counsel. The Corporate Counsel functions in a dynamic and changing environment that will require flexibility and active management of priorities. A close liaison must be maintained with the General Counsel keeping him/her informed of significant developments and seeking his/her advice and assistance when appropriate.

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS

  • Law Degree from a Canadian law school or equivalent
  • Member of Ontario Bar
  • 3 to 6 years relevant experience gained in a leading law firm or corporate legal department

NON-ESSENTIAL BUT VALUED QUALIFICATIONS/EXPERIENCE

  • Member of the Quebec Bar
  • Proficiency in French [Spanish etc.]
  • Advance degree in [complimentary subject matter – MBA, Finance etc.]
  • Other skills and competencies gained through non-legal industry experience

RESPONSIBILITIES AND DUTIES

It is expected that the Corporate Counsel will be skilled in the drafting of legal documents and demonstrate the ability to identify the legal issues, research and analyze complicated situations and develop practical solutions in an efficient manner. Opinions, decisions and actions will have an effect on all functions within the Company.

35% – Securities/M&A duties include:

  • Maintain corporate books and records for the Company and all Canadian subsidiaries.
  • Prepare and review public filings, press releases and other public disclosure, including but not limited to disclosure obligations to the OSC, TSX and SEC.
  • Ensure compliance with all applicable corporate and securities laws and regulations.
  • Advise on legal matters associated with the acquisition and disposition of businesses and Company assets.
  • Advise and counsel the board of directors on issues relating to corporate governance and fiduciary duty

35% – Commercial law duties include:

  • Draft, negotiate, review and interpret contracts and other legal documents (e.g. purchase, sale, procurement, consulting services and construction contracts, warranties, guarantees and licenses).
  • Counsel and assist sales force with negotiating and drafting contracts.
  • Advise on legal matters relating to the purchase and sale of products, including business strategies, advertising, pricing arrangements, marketing and promotional practices and product liability.
  • Advise on legal matters relating to commercial and industrial leases and related environmental and regulatory issues.
  • Advise and provide training to colleagues on matters relating to consumer protection law and customer privacy issues.

20% – Intellectual Property duties include:

  • Manage the intellectual property portfolio (patents, trade secrets, trademarks and copyrights) of the Company.
  • Negotiate intellectual property agreements, such as License Agreements, Co-Development Agreements, Consulting Services Agreements, Procurement Agreements and Non-disclosure and Confidentiality Agreements.
  • Educate clients regarding compliance with intellectual property based laws.

10 % – Other duties include:

  • Counsel clients on legal implications of their Company’s plans, policies and actions and giving legal opinions on specific matters.
  • Advise on human resource and employment law matters, including discipline, termination and severance issues.
  • Advise on legal claims by and against the Company.
  • Identify and manage relationships with outside counsel to facilitate completion of above objectives.

KEY RELATIONSHIPS WITH OTHERS

Departmental

  • Consult with, advises and report to General Counsel
  • Consult with and advise Patent Counsel on matters relating to patent, trade secrets and intellectual property law
  • Instruct and manage a corporate/securities clerk

Internal

  • Maintain good working relationship with senior management and with managers in the Sales, Marketing/Advertising, Finance/Accounting, Human Resource and Research and Development business groups
  • Maintain good working relationship with the Corporate Secretary and the board of directors

External

  • Instruct and work with outside counsel.
  • Negotiate with counterparts in other companies, in private practice, and opposing counsel.
  • Liaise with and obtain guidance from government officials on legal matters affecting the Company.

FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND AUTHORITY

Manage staff of two securities clerks and coordinate budget and administrative functions with the General Counsel

The In-house Lawyer’s Guide to Job Descriptions

You are a General Counsel or a senior legal counsel and after too many months of filling multiple roles in your legal department and almost as many months making the business case for an increase in headcount, you’ve finally received approval to hire a new lawyer for your team. What now? Before, you post job ads in the Ontario Reports and Lexpert Magazine or call your legal recruiter; the first step is to create an accurate and effective job description for the position.

A written job description is a multi-purpose document that provides a descriptive summary of the accountabilities and deliverables of a position and has utility across a wide range of human resource management functions. In addition to creating a job description whenever a new job is created, it is also good management practice to review and update existing job descriptions whenever a job’s responsibilities change or when a job’s reporting relationship changes in order to verify that the position’s responsibilities and reporting relationships are accurate.

This short article presents the key functions and benefits of a job description and provides an annotated checklist of its essential elements. At the end of this article, I’ve provided a link to a downloadable ‘Form of Job Description’ for a corporate counsel position that you are welcome to use as a template for creating your own job descriptions.

A. Key Functions and Benefits of a Job Description

1. Recruitment Tool

A job description provides the General Counsel or direct supervisor with job information for posting and advertising a job for recruitment purposes. A job description should, not only provide the basis for determining selection criteria and competencies, it should do so in a way that identifies the most marketable qualities of the position. It will also help interviewers formulate appropriate interview questions. The job description is also a marketing tool which will help you attract, assess and hire the right person for the job.

2. Compensation/Budget Management

A job description assists in determining the appropriate classification and compensation for a particular job. They are also necessary for developing and maintaining equitable and competitive compensation programs and assist the General Counsel with determining the most effective and efficient strategy for allocating the budget between external legal counsel and inhouse personnel.

3. New Employee Orientation

A job description is an essential tool for the General Counsel/supervisor to explain and clarify key reporting relationships, accountabilities to key business units and expected deliverables of a job to a new legal counsel. The initial orientation process is especially important when transitioning a lawyer that was previously in private practice into a new in house legal counsel role with entirely different job expectations.

4. Employee Performance Management and Development

It can be exceedingly difficult to develop performance standards without a detailed description of a job and its essential functions. A job description provides a basis of understanding between the General Counsel/supervisor and the employee about the responsibilities, objectives and priorities of a position. It serves as a means of communication for improving work planning and feedback. In addition, a job description provides the standards for tracking and managing performance, that in turn form the basis of performance appraisals and reviews. Performance management will support management decisions relating to promotions, salary increases, performance bonuses or discipline, counselling and termination. Formal, up-to-date job descriptions reduce misunderstandings regarding job duties, responsibilities and performance standards.

5. CLE and training

Continuing legal education and non-legal training requirements for a job must be actively assessed to ensure that the employee is equipped to meet the job requirements. A change in responsibilities may result in the need for skills upgrading and revisions to the job description.

6. HR/Organizational Planning

General Counsel/supervisors and HR mangers may use job descriptions for organizational planning, wage and salary surveys and reviews, human resource planning and development and occupational studies for statistical purposes.

B. The Essential Elements of a job description? An Annotated Checklist

A job description should articulate the results of the work assigned to a position; it should not describe how the work is done or the process and procedure to be followed. If such details are included, the job description will require constant monitoring and revision when ever these details change.

  1. Position Title and Location – identify the job title and the physical office location
  2. Supervisor’s Position Title – identify the direct supervisor for the position by title only
  3. Purpose of the Position – describe the basics function and purpose of the position and describe the function legal department in the context of the enterprise as a whole. It is not necessary to describe what the position does, but focus on establishing a context for the position and the legal department.
  4. Minimum Qualifications – list the essential qualifications such as a law degree, Ontario or other bar qualification, minimum numbers of years of legal experience and any other qualifications that are necessary to satisfy the job requirements.
  5. Non-essential qualifications/skills – list any qualifications or skills that would be valuable to an employee in the position (such as : proficiency in other languages, qualification in another Canadian or perhaps a US state bar, advance degrees in subject matter areas relevant to the business of the company such as an engineering, science or finance or technical non-legal work experience).
  6. Specific responsibilities and duties – identify the key responsibilities and duties that the position is accountable for. It may be useful to first break down the position into the main types of legal subject matter that the job will be responsible and then prioritize these responsibilities and duties based on the percentage of the total practice each subject matter area will require.
  7. Key relationships/organizational chart – identify and describe the nature of the key departmental, internal and external relationships that the employee in the position will be expected to develop and maintain. The internal relationships with key business people in the main business groups that the legal counsel will be expected to advise and counsel should be clearly identified.
  8. Financial responsibility and authority – outline financial responsibilities for planning, managing or monitoring external legal budgets as well as departmental personnel management responsibilities.
  9. Compensation/Benefits – outline the compensation details for the position, including both monetary compensation such as base salary, performance/retention bonus and pension/RRPS contribution plans and non-monetary compensation such as paid vacation, health and medical benefits, etc.
  10. Date prepared/Date approved – identify who and when each job description was prepared and when and by whom each job description was approved.

In addition to the essential elements enumerated above, it is important to remember that a job description is also a marketing document. In-house lawyers often become so familiar with their own organizations that they focus entirely on the specific responsibilities and duties and often fail to include the ‘sizzle’ when drafting a job description. Don’t miss out on a great marketing opportunity, a well crafted job description that is prepared with care and attention will increase the likelihood that you recruit the right candidate into your team and it will also increase your organization’s profile and strengthen its brand within the legal community.

How General Counsels Can Help Integrate Lawyers From Private Practice to In-House Counsel

Tom the General Counsel at Acme Co had been petitioning senior management for the past 18 months for the authorization to hire another lawyer in his department. It was clear that Tom was overworked – and the outside legal bills were mounting. As a result, management finally gave Tom the go ahead to hire another legal counsel. The GC quickly recruited Jerry, a 3rd year M&A associate from one of the leading firms in the city. Jerry had come with excellent transactional experience and impressive reviews (had routinely billed 2000+ hours and received the top end bonus at his firm). Jerry arrived on day one, excited, enthusiastic and raring to go. Hanna, the representative from HR greeted him, showed him to his cubicle, (on the way, pointed out the washroom and cafeteria) and directed him to the supply room where he could get his pens, paper and, of course, post-it-notes.

Jerry settled in to his cubicle and, after 15 minutes, decided to explore the floor and find Tom’s office. Upon locating it and finding it empty, he was informed by Tom’s assistant, Barbera, that he was in back-to-back meetings all day. Jerry left a message with Barbera for Tom asking for work. Just after lunch, Jerry was contacted by Barbera and advised that Tom was very sorry he was so tied up but that he would try to speak to him by day’s end. In the interim, Jerry should read recent press releases and marketing material about Acme in order to familiarize himself with the organization.

Tom and Jerry eventually did hook up on day 2 and Jerry was given a quick introduction to one of the business groups. He was told that they’d probably have work for him as they will be one of his main client groups. Jerry was indeed given work but with no mentoring, he floundered around for a while, tried to get help from Tom (who’s in perpetual meetings), did the best he could in order to meet the deadline and submited a less than stellar piece of work to the business group. As a group, they make a note to avoid Jerry in the future whenever possible… After a couple of months of this, Jerry meets up with Tom to resign (he would have resigned earlier if he could have secured an earlier meeting with Tom). He doesn’t think in house is for him – his firm is willing to take him back and although the hours in house are more predictable, he’s not enjoying it as much as private practice.

Tom is shocked – what went wrong?

Although you may think that the above example is an extreme case, I have recruited candidates into environments that were not that different. You, as General Counsel / mentor, have a great deal of responsibility when hiring a new lawyer onto your team. How you manage and integrate the candidate may be the difference between developing a mediocre in house counsel versus an excellent one.

In-house law departments have been steadily expanding since the 1980’s, largely driven by the rising costs of legal services provided by law firms. The practice of law within corporations is different to that of a law firm in a number of key areas – if a candidate has been successful in a law firm setting it does not necessarily mean that they will thrive in house. Identifying these differences are key in determining what skill sets would be best suited for an in house role. Armed with this knowledge before you begin the recruitment process will help to ensure a strong hire and a successful integration of the candidate. This article will set out potential stumbling blocks your new recruit may encounter and how you can manage through them.

Integration:

One of the first things you should do when a new lawyer joins your team is immediately give them work. This sounds obvious but surprisingly, doesn’t always happen. This will help integrate them into the corporation, and make them feel that they are part of the legal team. The most common complaints I receive from new recruits is “the company wasn’t prepared for me”; or “there’s nothing to do”; or “I was introduced around and then shown to my office – I haven’t seen the GC since”. Remember that the first few weeks are very important. The candidate may be feeling insecure, uncomfortable and unfamiliar with the surroundings.

General Counsel’s role: As the General Counsel, you need to dedicate some time during these first few weeks to properly integrate the candidate into the organization. Prior to the candidate starting, you need to inform you legal team and the relevant business groups and prepare work/projects for their first weeks. Once the candidate arrives, you need to take time to properly introduce them to the business teams.

“Can we talk?”

Communication skills are the cornerstone of any business and legal practice. Recent surveys have suggested that “better people management skills are essential for outstanding performance in one’s role”. The client pool for in-house counsel is often generated by the corporation itself. However, like most law firms, lawyers are expected to initiate and develop business relationships through company social events, breakfast or lunch meetings, or make visits to the person’s office to enable them to build their knowledge of the company and clients.

With some of your younger recruits, you may find that they have never dealt directly with clients before – they may have only had work delegated from partners. As a result, they may never have had to develop client relationships or to seek out work and develop a practice. Since one of the main measures of success for a legal counsel is if they are able to attract work from the business groups, this is a skill set that is worth spending time developing.

While good communication with the business groups is essential, an effective law department is also based on solid communication within the legal team. The law departments in larger corporations consist of many non-legal professionals who handle a variety of jobs including legal research, filing, drafting documents, and even running meetings. It will be important for the new recruit to build and nurture these working relationships in order to form the foundation of a successful department.

General Counsel’s role: As a mentor, you should start by introducing the associate to the business groups with whom they will be spending the most time. ‘Market’ them to those business groups – eg ‘Joan has come from an excellent firm and has had extensive experience drafting and negotiating a wide variety of commercial contracts. We’re very pleased to have her join our team.’ – so the business groups will know that you are fully behind the hire. If possible, staff them on projects that will introduce them to the business groups – eg training or educational projects. Encourage them to speak with their business groups so they can educate themselves on what the business groups do, what their objectives are and how legal can best assist to provide them with useful, business legal advice. Make sure they understand that the business groups are their clients – it is important that they network and develop strong working relationships with these teams.

Avoid becoming the ‘bottleneck’:

A new legal counsel must also be taught that the very thorough 6 page memo that was required in private practice is not longer what is desired in house. The business groups will want definite, short answers to their questions. One legal counsel relayed to me that when she first moved in house, she would provide her clients with a pro vs con answer to their questions, complete with explanations for both. She soon realized that, after about 2 minutes into her explanation, their eyes would glaze over – they were much more interested in a definitive answer than her explanation.

In house lawyers need to be decisive and to turn things around quickly. If they are seen as a ‘bottleneck’, their business groups will soon try to avoid them. This skill set will be developed with experience, but can also be a learned behaviour.

General Counsel’s role: If you exhibit this skill and set this standard, your team will soon follow your lead. You can teach your new recruit through mentoring and your own practice with the business groups that one can’t spend time on a file as one did in private practice. You can teach them how to consider the question of risk when providing legal advice. Part of this will come with experience and by learning more about what is important to the corporation and, culturally, how much risk the corporation is willing to take. If the culture of your organization is a ‘risk taking’ one versus a conservative one, this is something that should be considered during the recruiting stage. You will need to match the candidate’s character with the culture of the corporation.

Decisiveness:

Following on from this point is that the new recruit will have to appreciate that ‘the buck stops with their decision’ – that is, they will most likely not have a senior partner checking their work and whatever advice the legal counsel gives to the business groups will most likely be acted upon. Some associates – especially the more junior ones – find this an ‘uncomfortable’ situation to be in, at first.

General Counsel’s role: As General Counsel, you should build your young counsel’s confidence by initially helping them make smart, practical decisions and then standing behind their decisions. Even if they make mistakes, which is bound to happen, you need to continue to support them and assist them in correcting the error. If you chastise them, you will soon develop a legal counsel who is afraid to make any decisions for fear they may be incorrect.

Fee earner to cost centre:

The new recruit will have to understand that there are a number of changes to the environment and their role. For example, they must realize that they are no longer a fee earner, but rather a cost centre. This will mean that they may be treated differently than they were at their firm. They most likely will not possess the same amount of influence and must realize that they are service providers for other departments within the organization. As well, they may no longer have access to the same number of support staff / resources and therefore, should be prepared to do more administrative / clerical work (eg photocopying, amending documents, arranging meetings, etc) as part of their practice.

General Counsel’s role: To a certain extent, this understanding can be explored during the recruiting stage. By asking the right questions, you can get a feel for whether the candidate has a reasonable understanding of what their role will be and how it differs from their role as a private practice lawyer.

Organize and Prioritize:

As well, it will be important that they learn to prioritize and manage their clients’ expectations. In their law firm, they may have only had to focus on one or two major transactions at a time. Usually, in house, there will be many more items to deal with, the work will be more varied and the legal counsel may be dealing with many more business groups at the same time. And, of course, one can’t hide from those business groups – they will show up in your office.

General Counsel’s role: You will need to help them learn to prioritize the work, help them gain a greater understanding of the corporation’s main objectives and give them the freedom and support to push back on some of the more aggressive departments. In cases with particularly difficult departments, you may have to step in and use your senior position to control the situation.

Resourcefully independent:

A legal counsel from private practice will, most likely, be used to having many sources to draw information from. They will be used to not only looking to partners, but will also have looked to senior associates and their peers when they have a question or are unsure how to proceed with a matter. These resources will probably not be available in house. There will most likely be fewer lawyers and the lawyers there are may have less time to train an associate. The idea of a ‘team of lawyers’ tackling a project may not exist in house.

Likewise, you as their principal may not be as available to mentor them. You should be aware that you will need to put time aside to mentor and train a new recruit. If you are not willing to put this time aside, you risk losing the lawyer or having the counsel get off to a potentially rocky start with your business groups – both of which will come back to haunt you.

General Counsel’s role: As a GC, you will have to encourage the associate to work more independently and be more resourceful. Depending upon the level of experience and personality type of a candidate, this process may happen over time or may be achieved in one conversation. In either case, it’s important that you assure the associate that you are supporting them, and standing behind their decisions. As a manager, you will need to praise them when they do a job well in order to continue to build their confidence and allow them to make mistakes. As well, you should encourage them to widen their network of ‘mentors’. Instead of only looking to other lawyers, they should be aware that people in the business groups can also be useful resources. If you know you will only be available for limited mentoring, looking for candidates who are used to working independently and are resourceful during the recruiting process will be important. Your anticipated availability as a manager may also have an effect on the level of candidate you decide to recruit.

Develop Business Acumen:

The role of legal counsel in a corporation is to provide legal solutions to a business problem. Hence, a combination of business acumen and a solid legal background is the ticket to success to working in-house. The understanding of the organization, ranging from its market/customers, recent acquisitions or dispositions, main services and products, and its present and future objectives are of critical importance.

The legal counsel will become most useful to the organization if they are able to look at things from a legal point of view, while taking into consideration the corporation’s present goals and its future initiatives.

The corporate world has an entirely different language of its own, which legal counsel will be obliged to learn. Business clients need legal issues to be addressed in plain English as well as what the business impact of the legal advice will be. Interacting with business professionals and clients in the appropriate language ensures a seamless integration between the legal and business sectors in everything from simple daily dealings to important transactions.

General Counsel’s role: In order to help counsel, you need to keep your team apprised of the corporation’s plans and help them to begin to think more like ‘business’ people, rather than just lawyers. You should encourage them to spend time with the business groups and participate in internal meetings whenever possible.

The Generalist:

Usually, the core of every law department is a group of professionals with impeccable and general legal backgrounds. This is contrasted with private legal practitioners who are increasingly recognized for their expertise in a specialized area of law. This highlights one of the main differences between private practice and corporate law departments. Cameron Findlay, Executive Vice President and General Counsel for Aon Corporation, had extensive experience in private practice prior to working as general counsel. He comments, “Corporate work…tends to require more of a generalist orientation, whereas outside counsels usually need to be more specialized.” A week in the life of a corporate lawyer may vary from a securities’ transaction at the start of the week to addressing a labor law issue at the end. Hence, the ability to work in the general areas of law is imperative to the successful integration into in-house positions.

This variety of work requires an in house lawyer to be a multitasker. The workload in a law firm typically consists of a few long-term cases at one given time, while corporate counsel requires the ability to maintain a diverse and dynamic practice. The ebb and flow of a business, unlike a private law firm, invariably allows for questions and problems to surface daily. The variety of both legal and business issues requires multitasking skills as well as efficient problem-solving strategies. As the day progresses and problems arise, the order of priorities may also change many times.

General Counsel’s role: If the work is going to be varied, you will need to be mindful of this when recruiting – ie you will not want to hire a specialist. After you have hired the counsel, you should encourage the new recruit to sit in on meetings and telephone calls with outside counsel which will expose them to different areas of law. You can also arrange to have regular internal meetings within the legal team in order to exchange legal knowledge. Finally, to help your team stay informed of the ever changing law, you can support and encourage CLE and invite outside counsel in to give seminars on recent changes to specific areas of law.

Management Skills:

In corporations, larger transactions and matters involving specialist advice often require input from external law professionals. The identification, retention and subsequent management of outside counsel are important aspects of the in house counsel’s duties. Corporate counsel should therefore be capable of playing the role of a manager, coordinating and overseeing different teams of people to facilitate seamless multi-disciplinary interactions.

<strong If the new recruit will be responsible for managing outside counsel, it will be important that you recruit a candidate who is organized, confident and personable. This may also affect your decision as to what level of call you recruit – if the candidate will be dealing with senior outside counsel, you probably will need to hire someone with some experience under their belt.

Making the transition from private law practice to the legal department of a corporation represents change and adaptation on many fronts. By highlighting and being aware of these differences, you, as General Counss el, can make the integration of new lawyers entering the corporate world as seamless as possible. Although the time within each lawyer’s career at which this change is made can vary from as early as the articling process to a mid-career move, the same principles outlined above apply. By spending a relatively small amount of time in managing the transition from private practice to in house, you can increase the chances of having a productive and well integrated addition to your team.

Maximizing Associate Retention

According to the NALP Foundation , 77% of associates leave firms within the first 5 years of practice, 40% leave within 3 years and 62% leave within 4 years. Conservatively, it will cost a firm of 400 lawyers that has an attrition rate of 15%, $12 million dollars annually.

Is retention of associates a problem that needs to be addressed? Most definitely.

If one uses the figure of $200,000 in costs to a firm to lose a junior associate (this is a conservative figure as Catalyst suggests it is closer to $315,000), this means that for every 5 associates a firm loses, it will cost the firm $1 million dollars! These costs include the loss in productivity while the position is vacant, wasted training costs, potential clients who may leave the firm with the lawyer, knowledge which the associate will take with him, morale amongst the other associates left behind, recruiting a new hire, time spent by HR and the lawyers in interviewing new candidates, training a new hire and start up time for the new hire. This figure of $200,000 does not include the disruption and frustration experienced by the client with on-going turnover.

Firms are beginning to realize that it is imperative that they seriously consider creative solutions to the retention problem. Following are a number of issues which you may wish to review and discuss with your firm surrounding this issue.

Hiring practices:

One cannot consider the question of retention, without reviewing one’s hiring practices. That is the first step in determining how likely the candidate is to stay with your firm, long term.

In most Canadian law firms, many of the associates are “home grown”, that is, they are hired on as summer students, brought back as articling students and hired back after they’ve completed their articling year. Let’s review that recruiting process. The law firms and universities arrange a date for ‘on campus interviews’ (OCIs) and all major law firms conduct the interviews at the same time. This creates an incredible amount of pressure for both the firms and students. The students are usually still in their 1st year when they apply to the firms and the interview roster is largely based on those students who have performed the best academically. If you happen to be a “late bloomer” at law school, too bad – hopefully, you’ll be able to land one of the few articling positions that may come available after 2nd year.

If a candidate is granted an interview, they have a whole 17 minutes to make an impression. Talk about an unnatural situation! One can see how this process favours candidates who are outgoing, extroverts, talkative, assertive/aggressive (who can tell the difference in 17 minutes?), confident/overly, confident/maybe even egotistical and let’s face it … good looking. That is, all the criteria that, historically, have been shown to make the best first impressions on most people.

Although the firms go on to conduct more thorough interviews after the OCIs, the point is that the firms are basing their first “cut” on a flawed process and as a result, the “pool” of talent that makes the first cut is probably not the best pool for your needs.

It’s not the candidates who make it through the first stage and are weeded out in the 2nd/3rd level of interviews you should be concerned about – you need to also be concerned about those candidates who were weeded out too early. When reconsidering this interview process, please remember some advice from the popular book, First Break all the Rules – “In the end, much of the secret to selecting for talent lies in the art of interviewing. Most managers are aware of the more obvious pitfalls: – don’t put the candidate under undue stress, don’t evaluate people on their appearance, don’t rush to judgment”.

Lateral recruiting is slightly different, but the same principles are applied. You need to identify what “talents” you want in the candidate (perhaps by studying some of your “best”) and then ask open ended questions to test for these talents. You need to be in marketing mode but be honest with what is required for the job – both positive and negative points. There are a number of other considerations to be made when conducting an interview, but as this isn’t about how to conduct an interview, I won’t go into details at this time.

One of the real benefits about how firms hire students is that for all of the summer/articling students, the firm has a great opportunity to observe/train them before making a permanent offer. Not only can you observe their work ethic, attitudes and talents, you can also bring in speakers, assessors and coaches, to assess their “fit”. You can use the summer and articling year to show them your firm culture. Partners from different departments can explain what is expected from both parties – they need to be realistic with the associates about what is required in order to succeed at the firm. Associates can talk about what they’ve found particularly difficult and positive about private practice. You may even consider having an independent third party give a seminar about what private practice is really like and lead a discussion about mutual expectations, encouraging students to be candid in their thoughts, goals and feedback. Being honest at this stage will eliminate some of the illusions and unrealistic expectations that students may be bringing to the position.

Make a Connection with your team

Making a connection with an associate goes a long way in retaining her. It’s interesting that most associates can identify the exact moment when they decided that they were going to leave their firm. Prior to the event, there may have been feelings of frustration, but until that one incident happened, they were not entertaining leaving their firm.

A huge portion of the candidates I interview have complaints, when boiled down stem from the fact they feel under valued, disrespected, in short, “unloved” or not “part of the team”. It is human nature that everyone, from the time one is young, wants to be part of “the group”.

As soon as they sense they are being excluded from the group the most common reaction is to devalue the group. Then, you couple this feeling of being undervalued with the reaction the associate may receive when they interview with another firm. They will be told “you’re definitely going to be part of our very collegial team”; “this is the type of work/clients we have and we will want you to work on those types of files” – they once again feel valued.

You may feel you’re too busy to concern yourself with every individual’s feelings that may get hurt, but if you approach your relationship with your associate in a respectful way, it will come naturally to you. You shouldn’t have to go out of your way to treat your team members with respect. If you make a regular practice of treating your team with respect, you will win the loyalty of your team and have built a reputation as a respectful mentor.

So how do we establish this connection between the firm and the associate? You can begin by taking an interest in what they’re doing, how their career is developing and what’s happening in their personal life. Proper integration is key to making people part of the team and keeping them for the long term. The integration process is an ongoing one. Depending on personality and level of experience, it can take months or more for a person to become truly integrated into the team and with the clients. All members of the practice group should make an effort to include the new hire and immediately give them work. The fastest way to make the new hire feel like they are part of the team is to keep them busy. Ideally, someone should be touching base with the new hire regularly for the first six to twelve months, or longer if it looks as if the person needs more time. They should be reviewing the person’s hours to make sure she is receiving work, finding out whether work is coming from a number of partners, and seeing if the person is getting involved with internal firm activities, such as committees and social events. One survey found that 80% of employees who had been coached by their managers felt a strong sense of commitment to their organization, versus 46% of employees who received no coaching. Providing them with ongoing feedback sends the message that you care about their development as a lawyer. It has been estimated that approximately 50% of the nonperformance problems in business occur because of the lack of feedback, and about 50% of what appear to be motivational problems in business are actually feedback problems.

It is also useful for the firm to ensure that the lawyer connects with her co-workers. Research has shown that employees who have better relationships with their coworkers are more committed to the organization. Team building events are fun and useful in creating connections within and between practice groups.

Some partners have told me, “taking such an interest in an associates life and career takes time and its such a waste if the associate ends up leaving”. However, these efforts are not a waste of time, because even if the associate leaves, she is far more likely to maintain a strong relationship with the firm, send work to the firm when possible and take a positive message about the firm to the market if she made a connection with the firm while she was an associate.

Retaining Women:

Although this has been treated as a separate retention issue in the past, this is no longer the case. The male associates are now beginning to seek the same arrangements as women with respect to their desire to spend time with their families. So although this article won’t spend too much time on this issue, there is some important information you should be aware of with respect to women associates in the practice of law.

Just over half of all law school graduates are female, yet, on average, only about 20% become partners. Obviously, the potential solutions suggested in this article will be quite relevant to women, however, the other matters which a firm should explore is internal women support groups, pairing young female associates with female mentors and training on how to client develop from a women’s perspective. Female candidates advise me that they have no female role models to look up to at their firm, they feel isolated and unsupported when they ask for a reduced hours arrangement or that many of the client development initiatives are male focused. Persuading successful women who are in senior roles to act as role models and provide support and mentoring will help firms give female associates the confidence and ability to succeed.

2 Tier Partnership track/ Reduced Hours:

A recent Catalyst study found that 45% of female lawyers cited work/life balance as the number one reason for choosing their current employers. And 42% of associates stated that they would take a pay cut in order to ensure a better quality of life.

Although the most common reason associates offer for leaving their firms is work/life balance, most associates don’t want to work 9-5. In fact, if placed in a 9-5 job, they’ll quickly become bored, feel unchallenged and want to leave. Most of them actually mean they want more predictable hours. They say that they want a better lifestyle, but when we probe deeper, we find that they actually want more control over their life. They feel they’ve lost control, can’t make plans in their personal life and that work is controlling their whole life.

For some, work/life balance means being able to spend more time with their children while the children are young. This is a difficult issue for the firms to deal with because often the associate hits this stage in their life at the same time they are becoming profitable for the firm and should be on the upswing of their career. A study by Altman Weil found that a firms doesn’t begin to recoup its investment in an associate until after 3rd year. And it’s not until mid-4th years that associates have acquired the skills and confidence to run their own deals. How does a firm solve this problem in a very competitive market with such demanding clients?

Interestingly, in preparation for this conference, I spoke to 10 large corporations and asked their general counsels, “In the past year, how many ’emergencies’ have you had where you had to call your external counsel in to do a piece of work that would require an appropriately qualified lawyer to stay after 7 pm to complete the assignment?” The answer from all of them was ‘rarely’.

So, what this suggests is that either:
1. the partners are setting self-imposed short timelines in order to impress the client;
2. work is not being delegated properly – either it’s not being spread around equally or it’s been given to an associate with a lack of experience, so he needs to spend more time in order to complete the work properly;
3. there aren’t enough associates to whom the work can be delegated; or
4. the work sat on someone’s desk until it became an emergency.

Addressing these issues will not solve all of your work/life balance issues, but it will certainly begin to solve some.

In considering changes on a larger scale, some of the firms (mostly in the U.S.) have created a two track partnership system. An associate can opt out of the partnership track for a number of years until their children are of school age.

In order for this to work properly, there has to be a full understanding and acceptance of this arrangement by the partners and the associate. The two most common complaints with these arrangements are:

1. the partner delegating the work doesn’t appreciate the associate is on fewer hours and continues to pile on the work so they end up doing a full week’s work in fewer days;
2. the partner treats the associate with disrespect for deciding to drop off of partnership track or
3. the associate is surprised that she is not put on the best transactions and the quality of the work she’s assigned drops.

The partners must understand that this means the associate will be working fewer hours and shouldn’t discriminate against them for doing so. This requires full “buy-in” from the partnership or else no one will take advantage of the option. From the associate’s point of view, they need to understand that dropping off of the partnership track may mean that the quality of work they’re assigned may be adversely affected for the short-term and, obviously, their timeline to partnership will be lengthened. That said, they will still remain part of the practice group and will be included in practice functions.

Another way firms have addressed the work/life balance issue is to implement a ‘reduced hours / flex hour’ program. In a recent Catalyst study, they surveyed 1400 lawyers and found that 66% men and 84% females felt flexible work arrangements were more important than compensation, career advancement opportunities and challenging work. Supporting this study is one done in the UK which found that 82% of associates (2-5 years post call) believed the best way to retain them is with flex work schedules.

However, like the 2 tier partnership track system, a flex hours/reduced hours program needs to be implemented properly in order to be effective. The partnership must be fully supportive of the program and the associate cannot be stigmatized for taking part in the program. All too often, this is not the case and lawyers’ careers suffer as a result.

Many critics of these initiatives argue that it doesn’t make good financial sense to implement these programs or if they have these programs everyone will want to participate. In short, the firm will not lose money under these arrangements. If you have an associate on reduced hours of 1400 billable hours and conservatively bill him out at $450/hour, the firm will still be profitable. Although the associate may be less profitable than an associate working 2000 hours, one cannot just look at the profits in a vacuum. One must consider the fact that if the firm loses that associate, someone is going to have to pick up the slack, which will lead to more hours worked by other associates who are already overworked. Of course, the firm will be more profitable if all the associates were billing 2000 hours, however, in this tight market, is not always the case that there are full time associates who can be hired to replace the associate who wants to work reduced hours. As well, there is the further benefit that, with less turnover, the clients will be better serviced, there will be consistency in service, and better morale. Perhaps the way for a firm to address this “profitability” concern, may be to have as part of the policy the fact that one is only able to participate in the programs after having worked a certain number of years with the firm.

To address the second concern – that everyone will want to participate in these programs – studies have shown that only 5 – 10% of lawyers will actually do so.

Job Sharing:

Can it possibly work? The answer is yes, if you have a firm and 2 lawyers with the right mind set. In a job share arrangement, two lawyers share one full time practice. The salary is split between them, pro rata, as are many of the benefits. So, ideally, it should not cost the firm much more than one full time associate. For this arrangement to work, it requires full communication between the two associates including copying each other on all emails and correspondence. It is often a good idea to have the 2 associates draft the job sharing plan which ensures that they have thought about the arrangement in detail.

Although it may sound extreme, firms tend to like it better than only having a part time lawyer, because someone is always there to provide service to the client, the client benefits from having 2 lawyers looking at a problem, there are fewer absences and the associates tend to be more productive.

Getting Creative:

Offering different types of support to your team can make all the difference in retaining associates and sending the message that the firm has their interests in mind. The best way to decide what to offer is to look at your audience – what are the sources of stress for the lawyers?

Some firms in the UK and US have offered onsite child care, concierge services and take out meal services at dinners (so the lawyers can take these dinners home to their families). Of course, remote access is useful, allowing lawyers to leave work at a reasonable hour to have dinner with their families or attend personal functions after work and then reconnect with work in the evening. Little gestures, showing you care, can go a long way. The Seattle firm of Perkins Cole has a committee that leave baskets of treats in employees’ offices for different occasions. The options are limitless – they don’t have to be expensive to implement and will go a long way in defining your firm culture.

Exit Interview:

The other important tool in determining why associates leave is, of course, the exit interview. But, surprisingly, many firms do not place much importance upon this step in the retention process. If done properly, this step can provide useful information and clues as to where a firm’s retention problems lie. And, a firm need not only conduct the ‘exit’ interview when someone is leaving – it makes sense to conduct random interviews throughout the year.

In order to get the most out of this step, there are a few suggestions I can make:
1. Use a trained independent 3rd party to conduct the exit interview. Departing employees will feel much more comfortable and are more likely to be candid with someone who is not part of the firm. By ensuring confidentiality, the answers will probably be more honest and candid.
2. Don’t conduct an exit interview on the employee’s final day. There are many mixed emotions which the employee will be feeling on his last day. Most likely, he will not be in the right frame of mind to participate in an effective interview. Usually, it is best to schedule the interview a few days after the candidate resigns or even after he leaves the firm.
3. Your questions should be consistent in order to ensure that the data you’re collecting from these interviews are of most use. You should work with the independent 3rd party to compile the questions most suitable for your firm.
4. You should conduct exit interviews on all departing employees – both those who leave voluntarily and who are terminated. Also departing employees at all levels – not just associates. Remember, one of the purposes of this step is to help you in your retention program.
5. Finally, make sure that you use the data. So often, the information is gathered from the departing employees and then filed away. This information needs to be shared with relevant practice leaders and partners and acted upon if need be.

If you are using a 3rd party to conduct the interview, make sure you relay to that person the positives you saw in the employee so this message can be passed on to the employee. It is effective to end the interview using this information – for example, “Firm A told me they’re very sorry to see you go. They thought you were a great team player and had a long future with them. That said, they understand why you’re leaving and hope if you ever decide to return to private practice, you will consider Firm A.”

Of course, even if you’re using an independent 3rd party to conduct the exiting interview, you will need to spend some time with the departing employee on their final day to ensure the relationship ends on a positive note. Keep in mind, that employee will be let loose on the market, so you need for her to leave on a positive note.

Attrition is an issue with which all law firms will always have to deal, however, there are ways to address this issue which will distinguish your firm from the field. You can respond to the associates’ concerns while still running a profitable firm. Effective programs, however, will require flexibility and a mindset shift by the partners. Some of these suggestions may seem like drastic measures, but balanced against the cost of attrition, your firm will benefit in the long run.