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WHAT DID NOT WORK II. Image

WHAT DID NOT WORK II.

Allan Colman, Managing Director, the Closers Group: [email protected]

WHAT DID NOT WORK II. This is the second in a series of comments on why in-house counsel rejected law firm business development efforts. Attorneys marketing must consider a wider range of sales considerations than typically brought to the table. Following are more examples of what I have heard counsel discuss law firm marketing presentations: 1. Make sure everyone on your team sits facing the inside counsel. Don't insult them by looking out the window or keeping…

WHAT DID NOT WORK II. Image

WHAT DID NOT WORK II.

Allan Colman, Managing Director, the Closers Group: [email protected]

WHAT DID NOT WORK II. This is the second in a series of comments on why in-house counsel rejected law firm business development efforts. Attorneys marketing must consider a wider range of sales considerations than typically brought to the table. Following are more examples of what I have heard counsel discuss law firm marketing presentations: 1. Make sure everyone on your team sits facing the inside counsel. Don't insult them by looking out the window or keeping…

Features

Keeping Passion in the Law Image

Keeping Passion in the Law

Lisa Horowitz

This article explores what keeps lawyers committed to the practice of law, what law firms can do to keep attorneys passionate about the law, and what lawyers can do to retain the passion.

Features

Available Upon Request? Qualified Immunity for Employer References Image

Available Upon Request? Qualified Immunity for Employer References

Charles Floyd

Given the protections from liability available in many jurisdictions, most legal employers have a good deal more flexibility than they currently exercise in handling requests for references. Yet, many cautious employers have been slow to liberalize their reference practices.

Features

Supplemental Bonuses Image

Supplemental Bonuses

Anthony Lin

New York's Sullivan & Cromwell LLP plans to pay counsels and senior associates (fifth-year level and up) bonuses tied to the firm's financial performance.

Features

An Upbeat View: Nonlawyer Ownership of Law Firms Image

An Upbeat View: Nonlawyer Ownership of Law Firms

Milton Regan Jr.

This article examines the two main objections to outside ownership of law firms. The first is that it would permit nonlawyers to interfere with lawyers' exercise of professional judgment. The second is that the firm's duty to its shareholders would lead it to focus blindly on maximizing profits.

Features

How Nonlawyer Ownership Abroad May Affect U.S. Firms Image

How Nonlawyer Ownership Abroad May Affect U.S. Firms

Michael Roch

This commentary provides some preliminary thoughts on how equity investments in non-U.S. law firms may change how U.S. law firms do business.

WHAT DID NOT WORK Image

WHAT DID NOT WORK

Allan Colman, Managing Director, the Closers Group: www.closersgroup.com

WHAT DID NOT WORK - 1. Offering to handle and manage what inside counsel already have the skills to manage. 2. Relying on good results but not working on the relationship. 3. Offensive humorous comments. Conducting comprehensive research on your clients and prospects, both as individuals and on their companies is one of the single most important components to successfully closing a new engagement. Yet it is one of the major reasons in-house counsel do not retain firms. Sure,…

Features

Detailed Billing Image

Detailed Billing

Zusha Elinson

Today's bills are as thick as case files, and at least as detailed. Concerned over what lawyers are doing with their time and who's working on a matter ' whether to track diversity or to keep expensive but inexperienced first-year associates off the case ' clients demand exhaustive accounting from their outside counsel.

Features

Normalizing Mix Variables in Financial Data Image

Normalizing Mix Variables in Financial Data

Ron Paquette

Most law firm managers understand the importance that business analysis plays in steering a firm toward success. However, as with so many things in life, a little bit of analysis can be a dangerous thing. Management reporting processes typically collect, organize, and ultimately combine data sets from different practice areas, offices, industries, etc. Superficial reports compare aggregate characteristics (<i>e.g.</i>, top-line results) without identifying the varying components contained within the data sets and normalizing for these variables. This can lead those who examine such reports to draw misleading or even totally wrong conclusions.

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