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Alternative law: why innovators aren’t beating big firms

There is much talk about how the legal pro­fes­sion is chang­ing and how alter­na­tive legal busi­ness providers are reshap­ing the indus­try. While things are undoubt­ed­ly chang­ing through tech­nol­o­gy and legal process out­sourc­ing, has much real­ly changed? Have atti­tudes changed?

The age-old phrase “No one got fired for hir­ing IBM” still rings true for large law firms that are seen as reli­able and trust­wor­thy, com­pared with their more inno­v­a­tive coun­ter­parts, even though the for­mer may be slow­er and more expen­sive.

In Charles Dick­ens’ Bleak House we are led satir­i­cal­ly through the Vic­to­ri­an courts and the pro­tract­ed case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce, which results in no mon­ey left in the Jarndyce trust, hav­ing all been absorbed by years of legal wran­gling.

Large com­pa­nies still pay big fees to big law firms, and appear reluc­tant to out­source work to alter­na­tive providers

If Dick­ens were to walk through Chancery Lane today, he would find much of it famil­iar. By con­trast, if he were to wan­der through a mod­ern hos­pi­tal, he would be over­whelmed and con­fused by the set­ting. The moral of the com­par­i­son? The legal pro­fes­sion has a lot of mod­ernising to do to catch up with the 21st cen­tu­ry.

Legal profession slow to embrace innovation

The legal pro­fes­sion in both eras share a risk-averse nature, but today’s legal busi­ness is hav­ing to embrace new risks in response to two pri­ma­ry trends. The first is tech­nol­o­gy use in the law busi­ness and lever­ag­ing flex­i­ble legal process out­sourc­ing arrange­ments. Sec­ond, increas­ing open­ness towards using alter­na­tive legal ser­vices and adapt­ing how lawyers and their clients col­lab­o­rate.

The two forces are not only chang­ing the legal pro­fes­sion; they are cre­at­ing a new legal busi­ness. Under­min­ing progress are two fun­da­men­tals Dick­ens would eas­i­ly recog­nise: fees and incum­bent rela­tion­ships.

Despite the fight to reduce costs and max­imise cost-sav­ing, big is still beau­ti­ful as legal depart­ments in large com­pa­nies still pay big fees to big law firms, and appear reluc­tant to out­source legal work to alter­na­tive legal ser­vice providers.

The Lex­is­Nex­is Coun­selLink 2019 Enter­prise Legal Man­age­ment Trends Report reveals alter­na­tive fee arrange­ments have only risen by a few per­cent­age points, while part­ner rates at the big law firms con­tin­ue to widen. Jarndyce and Jarndyce was exhaust­ed by fees, and the devo­tion to the bill­able hour in the legal pro­fes­sion sug­gests there is still a long bat­tle ahead for alter­na­tive legal ser­vices.

Long-standing partnerships built on trust and habit

Which brings us to rela­tion­ships. When cor­po­rate legal work is out­sourced to meet cost-effi­cient spe­cialised legal needs of the busi­ness, the work is doled out by in-house lawyers, many of whom start­ed their careers at law firms and go back to peo­ple they know.

Rela­tion­ships are based on long-stand­ing per­son­al and insti­tu­tion­al trust. A For­tune 100 com­pa­ny gen­er­al coun­sel, who wish­es to remain anony­mous, says: “I’ve been here over ten years. We were using Cra­vath when I got here; I’m sure we’ll be using them after I leave. When it’s a board-lev­el mat­ter, you don’t want to take chances.”

Retain­ing out­side coun­sel is dri­ven by four main fac­tors: geog­ra­phy, spe­cialised exper­tise, brand and a lack of inter­nal resources. Big firms reas­sure clients they answer all four. When in-house coun­sel are quizzed over costs dur­ing pro­cure­ment, they will dis­mis­sive­ly say they are not buy­ing basic office sup­plies, they are buy­ing legal exper­tise which comes big rather than cheap.

Alternative legal services more cost efficient

How­ev­er, accord­ing to a recent sur­vey by Tow­er Legal Solu­tions, man­ag­ing out­side coun­sel spend is dri­ving the use of alter­na­tive legal ser­vices, with near­ly 60 per cent of respon­dents say­ing this and con­firm­ing they use alter­na­tive legal ser­vices.

“Over the last cou­ple of years, we’ve seen cor­po­ra­tions imple­ment­ing legal oper­a­tions depart­ments and it’s to man­age out­side spend, and also to bring in new oper­at­ing pro­ce­dures, imple­ment­ing best prac­tices and tech­nol­o­gy,” says Leslie Firtell, chief exec­u­tive and founder of Tow­er Legal Solu­tions.

EY’s Reimag­in­ing the Legal Func­tion Report 2019 sug­gests firms are still at a tip­ping point. “Our sur­vey shows that while an aver­age of 33 per cent of busi­ness­es are already out­sourc­ing a range of legal func­tion process­es, such as legal‑entity man­age­ment, a larg­er num­ber (41 per cent) would con­sid­er doing so,” the report says. “It is notice­able, how­ev­er, that a sig­nif­i­cant num­ber (26 per cent) indi­cat­ed that they would not con­sid­er out­sourc­ing.”

Mike Fry, EY glob­al head of enti­ty com­pli­ance and gov­er­nance, says: “Many larg­er organ­i­sa­tions are strate­gi­cal­ly assess­ing which activ­i­ties they can appro­pri­ate­ly out­source. Typ­i­cal­ly, it’s activ­i­ties that are low­er risk and low­er val­ue, but manda­to­ry, either because they are crit­i­cal to the busi­ness or are a statu­to­ry require­ment.”

Big firms branching out

Anoth­er obsta­cle is tal­ent, with almost three in five busi­ness­es (59 per cent) fac­ing chal­lenges in attract­ing and retain­ing the appro­pri­ate peo­ple need­ed. This sug­gests there may be a tal­ent bat­tle to be won, either by bring­ing in-house or being more nim­ble in lever­ag­ing alter­na­tive legal ser­vices. A bal­ance of tech­ni­cal exper­tise, effi­cient tech­nol­o­gy, work­flow man­age­ment and lever­ag­ing legal process out­sourc­ing will be crit­i­cal to suc­cess.

For their part, in the spir­it of “if you can’t beat them, join them”, big law firms are cre­at­ing their own alter­na­tive legal ser­vices. Some law firms are using the alter­na­tive legal ser­vices mod­el to forge part­ner­ships with exist­ing providers. The larg­er law firms are look­ing to work with mul­ti­ple providers to offer a suite of legal solu­tions to their clients.

Thom­son Reuters’ Alter­na­tive Legal Ser­vice Providers 2019 report says one third of law firms plan to estab­lish their own ALSP affil­i­ate with­in the next five years. By cre­at­ing inno­va­tion labs and so-called “newlaw” prod­ucts, big law firms may get the best of both worlds: well-paid part­ners and nim­ble ser­vice.