11/27/16

Comp on the Client Side: Living in a Glass House

The billable hour has been trashed repeatedly over how it motivates bad behavior in law firms. The reasoning goes that rewarding hours billed motivates lawyers (associates and partners) to spend more time on tasks than necessary, resulting in inefficiencies. My personal opinion is that rewarding hard work is not the problem, but instead poor management over the efforts of workers is the real problem.

For now, I will leave that argument aside and turn attention towards clients. It's easy to toss stones at the glass house across the street, but clients should be taking a hard look at their own financial motivations first.

At a conference this fall, I posed a question on how clients reward their internal lawyers. The group involved included both clients and law firms. The question was: What financial motivations do in-house lawyers have for reducing the cost of legal services?  I figured it was a fair question, since that is the primary complaint about law firm compensation systems.

Part of the motivation for the question came from a conversation with a colleague who moved from a firm to a client over a year ago. They noted that in-house lawyers are not threatened by the emerging roles in legal departments focused on cost savings. The reason they are not concerned is that the new roles pose no threat to their own careers. In-house lawyers advanced by - being good lawyers and not by being cost focused.

After I posed my question to the group there was a long, silent pause. It appeared no one had ever asked this type of question, so people had to think about it. But even then, the response was just shrugs. Finally one person from the client-side noted that lawyers who regularly force write offs were noticed positively in some fashion.

Two thoughts:

1 - People in glass houses shouldn't through stones. If misaligned comp systems are a problem, you might want to start with updating your own before you trash others'.

2 - After giving it some thought, the one comment made about financial motivation is actually counter-productive. If in-house lawyers show value by securing regular write offs, they are being rewarded for engaging with law firms who are habitually inefficient, or worse, padding their bills.

I have run into #2 a number of times. My best guess is that in-house lawyers feel write offs are truly driving value since management can view it as measurable cost savings. At a prior firm I had one partner suggest we preemptively write down 2% of the time on every bill to save the client the time since that was what they did. I asked if the work was being done poorly necessitating a 2% hit. He said no. So I said no - since the client would still write the time off 2% to show value to their boss.

The challenge of aligning comp with client cost goals is therefore one faced by both firms and clients. And it is one more argument for why clients and firms should work collaboratively on addressing the needs for more cost savings and efficiencies.

Otherwise, expect to the hear the sounds of more glass shattering.

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11/23/16

Context Context Context

It is long believed that the key to real estate purchases is location, location location. And while I am not in the business of flipping houses, it seems to me and my limited HGTV understanding of the world, that location is pretty important when buying property. 
 

Recently, there have been a dearth of posts here and elsewhere relating to changing nature of the legal market, none of which are surprising or nor have any of the changes occurred in a vacuum. We've watched the incremental change for years and perhaps now we are just reaching the tipping point for all things legal client service delivery, AI, matter planning & pricing, LPO, LPM and so forth. The neighbourhood is changing and we've lost sight of the ideal location. 

It is not surprising that we can't see what's right in front of us.  Equal to the talk of the changing legal landscape, is talk of the information overload and how to bring one in line to assist with the other. For example I've posted about the need for better EI, UI, UX and the implementation of "design thinking" in solving legal problems or the problems of legal service delivery. I am a huge proponent of all these concepts. I really am, what I do, is fundamentally about wading through reams of data to paint a pretty picture. Without empathizing with the client and presenting my insights in a visually persuasive format, I have nothing.  There is a lot of discussion around data and data source integrity, around choosing the right databases, cutting through clutter and using video or layered graphics to tell the story. For a while now, I have been bothered by the disconnect by what firms think they need to do, what clients say they want and what those of us tasked with making it happen on the business side of law can actually accomplish.   We need to bridge the gap.  For me that means we need more, better, clearer context. 
When we teach information literacy in firms to help our clients navigate our information warehouses from the library, KM, business development, etc. we share what's available, what sources have been vetted and what process are used to share and archive.  Rarely do we indicate how the information is used or connected to other sources of intelligence within the firm.  When we talk CRM strategy for example, we talk about the need to share contacts for marketing lists not for relationship intelligence and building a unified approach to client service.  We talk about what tool to select, how to use the tools, refine workflows, clean and maintain the date but rarely touch on the why. And when we implicitly know the why, we make the assumption that everyone understands the task at hand as fully as we do. The why part of the equation is strategic; part of a bigger whole that not everyone will have access to or understand, but that's the "location" or the context we should strive to own within our firms. 

When I look at the list of "must have topics" at the upcoming AALL meeting for example the topics are very important, practical, and necessary but majority of the topics tactical and process driven.  Same could be said when I look at the upcoming LMA conference offerings. This makes sense, it is easier to teach someone how to do something than to have a philosophical and often culturally sensitive conversation around the why. Teaching context is not something we can do easily, it's like showing your work when you do a math problem. Sometimes you can draft a number sentence but most of the time it just makes overt sense that 2+2 = 4, don't make me explain it, just take the answer as it is, and consider the task complete.  I haven't completely worked it out yet, but solving for and teaching context is a mash-up of design thinking, Gail Fairhurst's concepts of framing against a backdrop of law firm cultural hegemony and the limited agency of allied professionals to turn context into action (though you could draw parallels to other industries as well). As I spend what's left of my morning wading through my daily tasks, I will strive to find the context in each task as it relates to whole, and I encourage you to do the same.

 

 

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11/21/16

Why All the AI Hype in Legal? - A Response to Ron Friedmann

Ron Friedman recently posted the following video to twitter.
Ron and I have talked about this a lot, going back to my AI posts last December when I suggested that we stop using the term Artificial Intelligence in legal because it causes more confusion, consternation, and general trouble than it's worth.

First, to answer Ron's question, why all the AI hype in the legal market?  The AI hype isn't happening in the legal market.  It's happening throughout the world.  It's now in our homes with Nest Thermostats and Hue light bulbs.  It's in our pockets with Siri, and in our offices with Alexa. It's the basis of one of the most engrossing shows on HBO right now, Westworld.  And we still have brilliant people like Elon Musk and Stephen Hawking warning that AI will likely kill us if we don't take precautions. What we're seeing in the legal market is just bleeding-through from the massive hype happening in the rest of the world.  And I think it's all about to come crashing down.  We will shortly enter into the great Trough of Disillusionment for AI.

I don't say that because I think AI will fail to live up to its promise.  On the contrary, I think AI will way outstrip our current expectations.  However, we humans are fickle.  Our expectations shift quickly. Louis C.K. explains it best in his routine about Airplane WiFi.  In the AI space, this same fickle attitude leads to an interesting phenomenon, over time we adjust what we believe qualifies as AI.  The more common a technology becomes the less we believe it to be Artificial Intelligence. 

Google isn't considered AI, but it 'knows' what you're typing as you type, and then it filters a large portion of the web to give you the most relevant pages.  It would have easily been seen as AI twenty years ago.  Siri and Alexa personal assistants respond to voice commands and can return information instantly or actually perform tasks online, but they are considered borderline AI at best these days. Completely self-driving automobiles are still seen as Science Fiction and therefore are solidly in the AI column, but I predict they will NOT widely be considered AI by the time they are commercially available.  AI is a moving target. By the time a technology is commercialized it's no longer considered Artificial Intelligence.  Consequently, we fickle humans are consistently underwhelmed by the promise of AI even as AI fundamentally changes the world around us.

The same is happening in legal right now.  AI is all over the place from e-discovery to contract review, due diligence, and data extraction, to my own company's expert system platform.  (Oh, BTW.  I've got another new job since last I wrote.) But the more we see of it, the less we believe it to truly represent Artificial Intelligence.  AI is always just beyond the horizon.  Just on the other side of the next technological breakthrough.  It's always something just slightly better than what we can do right now.

So I say, "Don't buy into the AI hype!"  Not because AI is not real, but because hyperbolic expectations for AI lead to a belief in 'magical technology'. And expectations of 'magic yet to come' will prevent you from taking advantage of the remarkable and capable technology that is absolutely available today. 

It's not 'Artificial' Intelligence, it's Your Intelligence: Augmented, Enhanced, and Multiplied.

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11/16/16

Evolution of Service Models in the New Law Library

[Ed. Note: Please welcome guest-blogger, and fellow law-librarian, Marcia Burris. Marcia is currently a Senior Consultant with HBR Consulting. - GL]

While the rate of change in the legal industry seems to be accelerating, change is not new to law librarians. In fact, those of us who have been around long enough have been hearing for the past 20 years or so that the days of the law library are numbered. It is certainly true that the use of books has declined in recent years, and the focus of librarians has shifted away from traditional print maintenance roles toward supporting attorneys through the delivery of information in increasingly digital environments. However, this article is not about the decline of print. We’ve already been there, done that, and it’s time to move on to a new topic.

But change continues, and so do concerns about the role of law librarians. In recent years, the “new” role of librarians as expert online researchers and content managers seems to be threatened again, this time by the trend toward creation of self-service research environments in which content is served up so conveniently and intuitively, that even the busiest attorneys (who necessarily have other things to do besides learn new search platforms) can find useful, on-point information without the guidance of an expert to lead them through the digital maze. The well-recognized expertise of librarians in organizing and directing users to content seems likely, in the view of some observers, to be supplanted by newer expert systems.

As the culture of attorney self-service expands, the question is circulating again about what the future of law librarians will look like – if we have a future.

Of course, smart information delivery systems must be built by experts, and customized to the needs of specific firms by professionals who understand their legal practice areas and unique firm cultures and deployed to end-users whose interest and comfort with change vary widely. Law librarians are uniquely suited to roles in developing and deploying new resources through their combination of legal knowledge, technology skills, and emotional intelligence.

Even after the new tools have been deployed and attorneys trained in how to use them, librarians continue to play a role in delivering service through these platforms, including performing on-demand research and providing alerts, platform customizations and other services to support end-users. For example, although push technologies for current awareness are typically customizable by individual end users, and some attorneys like to be hands-on with these tasks, more often the creation and curation of alerts falls to library professionals who can do so efficiently and accurately, saving attorney time for other work – such as, well, practicing law.

While librarians are invaluable to developing and supporting self-service technologies, that is not the only role in which they are proving their value.

During the recent SLA Webinar on Evolving Libraries, Kris Martin, one of my co-workers at HBR, discussed an evolution of library services that we have been tracking along two distinct paths, toward either a User-leveraged service model, such as the primarily self-service environment described above, or an Expert-leveraged model.

While the User-leveraged model is characterized by increased investment in new technologies and librarian support for user-enabling applications, with a subsequent decrease in direct research, the role of librarians as researchers continues strong in firms where an Expert-leveraged service model has evolved. In these firms, the research skills of librarians are increasingly utilized as library professionals are embedded within practice groups and other administrative departments, where their familiarity with a wide range of resources and subject-specific knowledge combine to create competitive advantage. In legal practice groups, embedded librarians enjoy inclusion on client teams where they contribute research efficiency and value to client matters. In administrative teams, librarians work closely with marketing and others to provide research and analysis in support of their firm’s strategic business objectives. In addition to providing traditional research expertise, embedded librarians are frequently called upon to provide more sophisticated information analysis.
Both user-leveraged and expert-leveraged service models change the role of the librarian, demanding greater expertise and a pro-active approach to meeting firm information needs.

And there is one more high-value librarian role overarching both models, that of the Generalist/Knower of Many Things. While generalist researcher positions are declining as firms move toward user-leveraged or expert-leveraged service models, the individual with knowledge and experience across a variety of legal subjects, technology, and research functions continues to play an essential role in developing library and information services which support law practice efficiency and innovation. The true generalist who is involved in many areas of research work and engaged in conversations throughout the firm is uniquely positioned to identify opportunities. If innovation is about connecting dots, who is better positioned to deliver value than the individual whose vantage point includes multiple dots?

Firm leaders who empower their librarians to contribute value through support of user-leveraged or expert-leveraged service models and through direct involvement in the creation of systems to support practice and efficiency efforts, will find the “library” to be a valuable asset for many years to come.

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11/15/16

Clients Confirm: We Don't Ask Law Firms To Change

I entitled an ACC guidebook Unless You Ask. The title refers to a finding from a series of Altman Weil surveys on why law firms aren't doing more to change the way they deliver legal services. "Client's aren't asking for it" is always a top response from the managing partners. My impression is that the managing partners are correct in their observation that most clients don't ask. I am working to change that.

So kudos to Altman Weil for confirming with the clients themselves. Their 2016 Chief Legal Officer Survey included a stellar bonus question:

Reorganizing those numbers a bit, only 30.8% of CLOs rate themselves satisfied because they generally are (17.4%) or because they are pleased with their results from asking for change (13.4%). Of 69.2% who are not satisfied, the vast majority have not exercised their inherent authority to ask for change because they are focused only on outcomes/don't think it is their job to ask (43.2%) or have simply taken their business elsewhere (11.7%). The remaining 14.5% asked for change but did not get it.

This is what one might call an impasse:
  • Law firms are waiting on clients to make them change
  • Clients are waiting on law firms to be proactive or change in response to market pressure
In the long run, market pressure should prevail with client exit playing an important signaling role. But you know what they say about the long run. As discussed previously, the pace of exit is slow, and there is a lot of noise obscuring its signaling function. That is, to return to a framework I deployed in a prior post, loyalty continues to dominate (repackaging the numbers above):


The Voice share is higher than I would have predicted. Though it is about where I would have guessed (10-15%) with the success rate factored in. That 13.4% of in-house departments are effecting change in the way outside counsel deliver legal services seems about right to me.

I am unsurprised by the failure rate. It is innovation. Innovation means different. Different entails risk. My fear, however, is that not much of anything was actually tried by those who now may be discouraged.

My friend Jeff Carr often refers to "massive passive resistance." Jeff was in the subset of GCs who regularly made public pronouncements of the need for the legal market to fundamentally change (i.e., discounts don't count). While that chorus became louder after the Great Recession, Jeff was still in the vanguard of an elite subgroup: those GCs who genuinely meant it.

We are all tempted to engage in virtue signalingsaying that which makes us appear virtuous without any real intention of attendant action. As in-house counsel, you may feel compelled to say you are interested in, for example, controlling costs. But, depending on the environment, you may not be compelled to actually pursue cost control. Instead, you focus exclusively on the substantive legal matters in your portfolio (the stuff you went to law school for). There is not necessarily a tradeoff between cost and quality. But there could be. And you'd rather direct your finite attention to your area of interest and accountability. This acute focus also leaves your powder dry for when the real dictate to cut costs arrives. The loosely run law department has a much easier time finding savings than the already lean machine.

As a result, GCs say many things that their departments do not take seriously. Law departments and their individual constituents say much that their law firms can dismiss as theater. Managing partners say all sorts of things that....Well, all of us are more talk than action (though degrees vary). A key to survival is knowing when people with power are serious. The remainder is subject to passive resistance.

I am not surprised then that some law firms were less than responsive to some law departments. Moreover, I suspect that some law departments had a hard time communicating what they wanted. It is reasonable to want your law firms to be more effective, cost conscious, innovative, efficient, etc. But these are nebulous demands. The conversation around service delivery is relatively new. Most in-house teams aren't quite sure what they want. They are just want more of it. And knowing what you want differs from articulating it in a way that is digestible by someone who has no frame of reference. Someone really ought to write a guide to such conversations.

And even if the communication from the law department was crystal clear, change is still hard and takes time. Maybe the law firm didn't know how to change. Maybe the client didn't have enough leverage with the subject firm. Maybe the person to whom the request was communicated did not have the authority/pull to make it happen.

Law departments should pursue concentrated, calculated, and and clearly articulated change initiatives supported by sustained attention (not the same as constant attention). Even then, some efforts will still fail. Such is the nature of experimentation. If guaranteed results are more important to you than improved results, keep doing the same thing you've always done for as long as it is sustainable, at which point you will have no option but to experiment and far less room for error.

The Exit share in the chart above is much lower than I would have anticipated. Moreover, the results of the bonus question above do not seem to square with other data in the report:


So 53% of clients have switched firms on the basis of "client service" while only 4.4% of clients have dropped firms due to "unsatisfactory service delivery?" There must be some critical semantic distinction I am missing. The higher exit number is consistent with general industry trends, including the survey's own findings on insourcing (which still remains less prevalent than discounts and AFAs):


I am fine with exit as a general concept/approach. But I continue to wonder how well it alone addresses the problem. What makes a law department believe that switching firms will fix the client service problem as opposed to just relocate it? The answer I usually get (anecdote warning) is that service delivery is explicitly included in the dialogue with the new firm as part of the retention process. That is, the law department is combining exit with voice.

This prompts the question as to why they didn't try voice with their existing firm first. Responses tend to suggest that it is easier to shape a new dynamic than reform an existing one. This strikes me as a fair point. But it becomes problematic when path dependence makes exit really hard.

The best read of the data tends to suggest that a majority of clients switch firms. But it does not follow that a majority of their firms feel the impact (only 13.7% instituted a convergence program). Most incumbents retain their privileged status while insulated from the voice of the customer.

Loyalty. I don't know how I feel about 17.4% of chief legal officers reporting satisfaction.
There is nothing wrong with being "generally satisfied." While I am a continuous improvement zealot (never totally satisfied), I had the pleasure of working with phenomenal outside counsel. I always wanted them (and us and me) to get better. But this desire did not obscure the fact that they were already exceptionally good. As strange as it may seem, I would have likely ended up in the "generally satisfied" or "got the changes we asked for" buckets.

Likewise, I am sympathetic to those CLOs who are outcome oriented or feel law firms should be proactive. Few CLOs have the time to worry about service delivery. And law firms should be proactive.

That said, I submit that it is the responsibility of the legal department as a whole to behave like sophisticated consumers of legal services. The fact remains that ours is a buyers' market, and the buyers cannot abdicate responsibility for how legal services are delivered. Silence is taken as assent to the status quo.

Accepting that the CLOs do not have time for the details is different than thinking that service delivery should not fall within the ambit of someone's (or someones') job description. For me, this responsibility grows with the size of the department.

A solo GC or a few lawyers just trying to keep their head above water absolutely need to triage. But specialization accompanies scale, as does the professionalization of management. In the survey, 77.6% of law departments with 50 lawyers or more report having one or more people dedicated to "law department administration" with 15.9% of their time (6 weeks per year) focused on outside counsel spend tracking and analysis. Since service delivery has an appreciable impact on spend (as well as quality and speed), it seems reasonable to suggest that a few of those days should be directed towards the subject.

Frankly, I've probably spent too much time thinking about legal supply chains. To me, the law department is not the retail customer (end user of the car, phone, etc.) but the manufacturer/distributor who should absolutely take an interest in how component parts are produced (i.e., responsibility for the entire value chain). Deep supplier relationships are central to my worldview. And I am probably missing something about what seems to me a facile approach to driving change—i.e., expecting instead of demanding.

It would be a completely different story if most in-house counsel were satisfied with their outside counsel. They aren't. It would be a completely different story if the pace of exit were enough to cause immediate modifications in behavior. It isn't. It would be a completely different story if the outcomes-only mindset were enough to close the gap between expectations and performance. It isn't.

We now have years of data on the CLOs' perception of how much pressure they believe they are putting on law firms and how serious they believe the law firms are about changing. There has been essentially no movement. In particular, the delta between the two has returned to pre-Recession levels:


I would wager that the gap will never fully disappear. Law departments are never going to believe that law firms are as serious about change as they should be. But look at what a low opinion corporate clients have of themselves. They only cracked six on the pressure scale once in last eight years. Clients seem to know that the outcomes-only mindset is not getting them the outcomes they want. Why not try a different approach? If it fails, the status quo continues just as it would have under the current regime. If it works....well, that's when things become really interesting.
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D. Casey Flaherty is a legal operations consultant and the founder of Procertas. He is Of Counsel and Director of Client Value at Haight Brown & Bonesteel. He serves on the advisory board of Nextlaw Labs. He is the primary author of Unless You Ask: A Guide for Law Departments to Get More from External Relationships, written and published in partnership with the ACC Legal Operations Section. Find more of his writing here. Connect with Casey on Twitter and LinkedIn. Or email casey@procertas.com.

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