Archive for Technology
Float That Money! The Politics of Paying Contracts
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During my legal career, I’ve represented both the sales side and the customer side in negotiating deals. While buyers and sellers argued over many issues, one provision always seemed to stay the same: the customer would pay a bill within 30 days. People refer to this kind of contract provision as the “payment terms.”
So color me surprised when I noticed one of my large clients insisting that it would only pay a bill within 45 days. They also pushed back on the seller’s right to terminate the contract for late payments, requiring the seller to give up to 90 days advance notice before it could do so. Floating your money for this extended time period gives you some great advantages when you’re the customer. A customer can use its levitating dollars during the extra time to garner interest or invest the money, money which, in the past, the seller would have had. Presto! Like magic, the extra time means extra dollars for the customer.
What happens to the seller? Think about it: 90 + 45 = 135 days to pay a bill. Most salespeople will tell you that waiting over 4 months for payment will clobber their cash flow and make it very hard for them to pay their own bills. The solution? The seller starts doing the same thing to its vendors. Now, when people negotiate the payment terms in a contract, they’re left in the rather disingenuous position of begging customers to pay within 30 days, then turning around and asking for much more time to pay when it comes to their own creditors.
Besides being a blatant violation of the golden rule (which we all want to follow, right?), the lack of reciprocity makes for an uncomfortable negotiating relationship and hits you with credibility and loyalty costs when it comes to your business partners.
A great example is playing out right now. Apple appears to be taking longer and longer to pay developers who create iPhone applications. Here we have a situation where Apple has tremendous power because it’s the gateway to the iPhone platform. Apple takes all the money users pay for developer’s apps and then relays the developer’s cut to them (minus Apple’s share), per the Apple contract agreed to by every developer. According to the copy of the Apple contract here, Section 3.5 requires Apple to pay the developer within 45 days after the end of the month that Apple received the developer’s payment from a user.
So if you buy my WhichDraft App (doesn’t exist yet, but I can dream, can’t I?) on March 1, Apple doesn’t have to relay your payment to me, the developer, until mid-May! While waiting over 70 days for my money is bad enough, according to this report Apple might be taking even longer. And since Apple controls access to the platform, the developer is left with a difficult choice: keep waiting while her own bills pile up, or threaten to sue Apple, which could provoke Apple into rejecting her apps entirely, effectively shutting the developer out of the entire platform’s market.
The situation makes me imagine Steve Jobs as the Soup Nazi: “No more millions of iPhone users for you!” Sure, there are laws against this kind of behavior, but if you’re a small developer, do you really have the time and money to litigate this kind of dispute? For most people, I think not.
That’s the power of a network access agreement. However, at some point, the pain could be so great that developers just move to a different platform.
Palm Pre, anyone?
If you enjoy this content, add me at twitter.com/JasonAnderman, thank you.
Web 2.0 for Contracts: Where to Go, What’s Free, What Costs Money
Posted by: | CommentsI gave a presentation last week for the Association of Corporate Counsel’s Law Department Management Committee (there’s a mouthful!) entitled:
Web 2.0 for Contracts: Where to Go, What’s Free, What Costs Money
Get up to date on cutting edge web sites in the Law 2.0 world. Jason Mark Anderman, President of WhichDraft.com, will provide an overview of some of the latest and best document, contract, and matter management sites for your use, as well as a demonstration of how they can be used in the course of your day to make you more productive.
Now people in Silicon Valley may be amused by me saying “Web 2.0,” given that the term seems to be gasping for its last breath, but in the legal world we’re a bit behind the times when it comes to technology. After all, for us lawyer types, Web 2.0 is still trying to take off!
So here are the sites I recommended during my presentation (somehow WhichDraft.com magically landed first on the list). Read ‘em and weep:
Free Sample Contracts and Contract Creation Tools
Free Sample Contracts
Social Media
Legal OnRamp (Want to hang out with the most cutting edge lawyers around? Legal OnRamp is the social media web site for lawyers and legal professionals)
Premium Contracts
MyLawyer (this is an impressive site, contracts and legal service integrated in one package with a flat fee; sadly, only offered in the UK; the owner is a company named Epoq that does offer a virtual law firm platform in the US called Direct Law)
Practical Law Company (tremendous resource for contract knowledge management)
Premium Matter Management
Mumboe (great Software as a Service (SasS) matter management premium site)
Premium Confidentiality Agreement Tools
BaselineNDA (Pretty amazing application, with some limitations, it can read and mark up a confidentiality agreement for you)
Not Web 2.0, But Free and Useful Sample Contracts
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.
If you enjoy this content, add me at twitter.com/JasonAnderman, thank you.