Archive for Strategic Sourcing Legal Services
How Procurement Can Engage Legal Expense
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Justin Fogarty has an intriguing post up at Supply Excellence entitled, “Category vs Procurement Experience: Which matters more?“
I think that using procurement managers without any prior experience in legal services is one of the biggest obstacles to procurement penetrating legal spend. In my experience, procurement departments routinely make the mistake of using a strategic sourcing manager without a strong understanding of the legal field. Legal services are a unique animal, and there are a number of vital issues to keep in mind:
(1) Nature of the Law Firm Beast. You must dispense with the normal approach of treating a law firm as one company, as a law firm is not much more than a group of diverse people, each with a book of business, and the lawyers and staff that support each book. As a result, law firm wide statistics and quality management are often unhelpful and do not drive across the board quality improvement and spend reductions.
(2) No Year Over Year Savings. You cannot set a target of year over year reductions in legal spend. The law department often has no idea, for any given year, what may materialize. A sudden class action lawsuit could be filed, a major construction vendor may walk off the job, or a sexual harassment lawsuit could result. Insisting that the law department spend less money than the previous year without taking this into account alienates the lawyers who are already reticent to support any kind of spend management. The better approach is to compare apples to apples, and try to get year over year reductions in purchasing the same kind of legal service that was previously acquired, as well as looking into whether a particular legal service is needed in the first place.
(3) Legal Background. I’m not saying that the strategic sourcing manager needs a law degree and practice experience at a top Manhattan law firm by any means, but it’s a good idea to get someone who was at least a contract manager or assisted with litigation management in the past, so they can have the ability to properly interface with the naturally resistant legal department and make the most effective decisions to drive cost savings. In particular, I think paralegals would excel as legal category managers.
You can see our free legal documents and free legal forms for procurement agreements here.
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3 True Outcomes: Sabermetrics for Lawyers
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I’ve been kicking around the idea of using sports statistics as a basis to create legal practice metrics for a long time now, and was even more interested after reading Moneyball by Michael Lewis.
I would love to get a discussion going here as to what these metrics might look like. To kick things off, I would suggest we think about the concept of 3 True Outcomes. This concept is used in baseball when evaluating pitchers. Generally, baseball stats experts (often known as “sabermatricians“) start with the idea that once a hitter hits a pitch and puts it into play, the pitcher has little to no control as to whether or not the pitch will be fielded for an out or allowed to drop in for a hit. So, to more accurately evaluate the pitcher’s actual performance, instead of the fielders behind him, sabermatricians often focus on what the pitcher can control:
(1) Home runs.
(2) Strikeouts.
(3) Walks.
While reading Beyond the Boxscore the other day, I realized that the transactional work I’ve spent my entire career performing is quite similar to pitching. There are aspects to negotiating a contract which are completely within my control, and there are other aspects that are not (e.g., obtaining a response from a client, getting a response from the other side, the other side providing revisions).
What can I control? I think there are, for a transactional attorney, at least 3 True Outcomes:
(1) 1st Client Meeting. This is where I gather all essential information from the client necessary to provide a 1st draft of the contract, and formulate a client approved negotiating strategy.
(2) 1st Draft to Other Side. This is where I send a 1st draft to the other side for their review.
(3) Revision Turnaround. This is how long it takes me, once I receive a revised draft from the other side (or the 1st draft if I don’t control the paper), to turn a draft and provide my own revisions for the other side’s review.
How would a legal 3 True Outcomes statistic be formulated? Well, one could create a cycle time (“CT“) stat and check the lawyer’s CT regularly. This would allow one to get a quick snapshot on which lawyers in your organization are turning drafts quickly and which are not. One could also break it down by each outcome, and have:
(1) 1CT: to see how long it takes me to do a 1st draft and formulate a client approved negotiating strategy.
(2) 2CT: to know how long it took me to provide a 1st draft to the other side (for deals where I do the 1st draft).
(3) 3CT: to know how long it took me to turn a draft after receiving a revised version from the other side (or if the other side did the 1st draft).
Of course, like any statistic, it may or may not reflect the attorney’s level of efficiency. For instance, an attorney that has an extremely fast CT might not be following an effective negotiating strategy and may be unnecessarily lengthening the negotiation with endless revisions. But this risk is true of all statistics.
What statistics are effective at is drawing our attention to an issue we may otherwise be unaware of. In a world where people often refer to the law group as the “Sales Prevention Department,” it would be of tremendous value to see who is actually moving the ball and who is not, then analyzing what the efficient lawyers are doing and building their wisdom into the process so we can improve everyone’s performance. Without statistics, such as, perhaps, CT, we cannot do this effectively.
What does everyone think? Thank you for your time.
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Supply Excellence’s Justin Fogarty was kind enough to cover my recent presentation at the IACCM Americas conference entitled “Alternative Fees Meet Web 2.0: How to Cut Law Firm Cost and Make Clients Happy.” The presentation uses strategic sourcing principles for procuring legal services, but really explains how to rein in costs for any services that you might need. Check out the presentation slides here (which use the amazing Prezi.com presentation software). Also, read our previous post on alternative fees here.
To capture some of that spend and have better legal representation, Jason recommends negotiating “incentives that motivate people to do better”. Meaning, structure your relationship with outside counsel so that there are either caps on fees for specific, clearly defined projects OR include “efficiency bonuses” that reward the firm for coming in under budget.
Couldn’t have said it better myself.
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Alternative Rocking Lawyers: They Might Be Giants
Posted by: | CommentsOne of my fondest memories from Washington University (in St. Louis!) was jumping up and down in a throng of thousands of students while we belted out “Istanbul Not Constantinople” during an outdoor concert by the alternative rock band “They Might Be Giants” (I was sad to recently learn that they didn’t write this great song, but only covered it; it was written by Nat Simon and originally performed by The Four Lads). Here’s a telling lyric for lawyers:
“Why did Constantinople get the works? That’s nobody’s business but the Turks.”
Alternative rock bands like They Might Be Giants originally emerged because they didn’t fit into any of the genres established by the recording industry/radio axis of musical power, even though listeners yearned for something different. Alternative music also flowed from punk rock, which itself emerged out of a negative reaction to the dominance of disco and other overly sentimental musical styles. The music business, like any other, is subject to market forces. And if an entire industry is not catering to its customers’ desires, then a new, young Turk player will emerge to do so, subverting and reinventing the old Constantinoplesque industry along the way.
Triggered by this NY Times article, people in the legal world are currently wondering if law firms will end the billable hour model and move to flat fees and other alternative approaches (click here for a list of articles on this topic). Many partners at major law firms are extremely fearful that they are looking at significantly less profits if they switch to alternative fees. I actually think that partners do not have to accept a drop-off. They do, though, need to fundamentally restructure the way they do business to make the same or more money than they have with the traditional approach. And they are tremendously resistant to do so.
I used to be an in-house lawyer at a Fortune 500 company. On one occasion I had a real estate law firm pitch me. The partner asked, “What can we do to get your business?” I said, “I think a lot of the word processing and the back and forth on contract versions is a big waste of time. I’d love to see a firm that uses contract creation automation software, and has all of its typical contracts and likely negotiation positions loaded into the software for automatic drafting, using a regularly updated knowledge management system. I’d also love it if you had an extranet to store all contract versions so we can skip the old email trap of zapping countless drafts back and forth that leads to version control nightmares. And I’d like you to bill me a flat fee determined up front for each matter.”
He blinked hard, swallowed, and said, “What else can we do?”
His question revealed the tremendous resistance to change in the legal world, where firms are stubbornly committed to a business model that does not meet their clients’ desires for better efficiency and predictable charges. The irony is that if a firm emerges that would actually embrace an alternative approach, it would have a huge competitive advantage in the marketplace and, in the long run, would make more money by growing its business. At some point a full service law firm or outsourcing legal services company will step up and seize this competitive advantage (we’re already seeing up front flat fee alternatives from partners like Jay Shepherd of The Shepherd Law Group, a highly regarded Boston employment law firm).
The biggest problem this new player would face is that all of the most desirable clients, major American corporations, have internal legal departments that choose which firm to hire, and all of these departments are populated by lawyers who used to work for law firms following the traditional model. They’ve all been conditioned to believe that billable hours, unpredictable budgets, and lack of efficiency are par for the course, so they won’t be interested in hiring this new player. Who will then?
Procurement. Right now, almost everything a major company buys, from cardboard boxes to management consulting services, is handled by a strategic sourcing manager who limits the number of vendors and uses that leverage to negotiate improved quality and lower cost. These procurement managers are chomping at the bit to control legal services, but, so far, most law departments have fended them off by making the law seem too mystical to tame. These managers would be the new player’s target market. If the law department tries to fend off their desire to hire, then the company will have a showdown. The arbiter will be the Chief Financial Officer, who, as long as she complies with the law, is almost always more powerful than anyone in the legal department.
And Chief Financial Officers love savings. And Istanbul. Not Constantinople.
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Torn Between 2 Lovers: Big Law Prestige vs. Microfirm Savings
Posted by: | CommentsJackie Hutter has a great post up over at IP Asset Maximizer entitled “Chief IP Counsel: Stop Discussing How Your Lawyers Bill You and Focus on the Model They Use to Provide Your Legal Services.” Tell us what you really think, Jackie!
In the post, Hutter makes an important point: clients are way too focused on begging law firms to cut their bills, without thinking about the model used by the firm to do the work. If a firm is traditional, with receptionists, secretaries, docketing clerks, and expensive real estate, then the bill can only drop so far (use our law firm matter engagement letter agreement to try, though!). But Jackie introduces us to the newer concept of the microfirm, where an attorney with Big Law experience works from home with no employees and is able to charge 50% less in some cases:
“Some might wonder how a micro-firm lawyer differs from a lawyer practicing in a . . . firm . . . setting. Well, the answer depends on whether or not the small firm or solo adheres to the traditional law firm model. If she . . . maintains the accepted staffing paradigm (e.g., receptionist, secretary, docket clerk etc.), this lawyer is still working within the law firm paradigm and cannot truly be considered a micro-firm lawyer. But if the lawyer handles her own administrative matters or outsources them to independent contractors on an as-needed basis, she fits the profile of the emerging micro-firm legal service model.”
A great example of a microfirm is entertainment law guru Thomas Crowell (picture at left). Thomas used to work in the New York Big Law world, but now runs an extremely efficient firm himself, bringing in like-minded colleagues for larger matters and charging his clients reasonable rates with excellent service.
Despite how attractive this approach may be, at many of the biggest clients microfirms have trouble getting in the door. From my perspective, the conundrum here is that the most lucrative, big kahuna company clients are uncomfortable hiring a microfirm because they lack the Park Avenue address and name recognition accoutrements. So they’re trapped between two competing desires, Big Law prestige and microfirm savings.
Additionally, clients on the legal cost warpath miss a huge opportunity to cut their bills even further, because they rarely think about their internal model used to interact with outside counsel. As we pointed out recently, clients seem to want outside counsel to cut fees, but to not make any changes to their own behavior that drives fees up. Every IP attorney that has worked on invention disclosures knows just how painful it can be and how many meetings it can take to tease out the necessary information. And clients love creating last minute fire drills at the time of docket deadlines, too. This behavior increases the bill, and needs to change if the goal is to lower cost.
So which lover will you pick, Big Law clients? Big Law, or the microfirm? To prestige, or not to prestige!
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