Avoiding Laziness in Setting Goals

Goal ConfusionIt seems axiomatic: if you don't know where you're going, how do you know when you've arrived? Yet many law firms fail to define the most fundamental of goals, leaving them prone to variable interpretation, or misinterpretation, on the nature of their fiscal health. Often the failure to define goals or track performance within a law firm is purposeful, lest we offend any partner who might not measure up. It's time to acknowledge two truths: establishing goals and measuring performance can be challenging, but it's critically necessary; and if you're unwilling or unable to tackle performance management, you're not qualified to serve in a firm or practice group leadership role. No business should operate without goals. But ascending to a leadership position doesn't magically confer any special goal-setting ability. As a consequence, many managers who mean well embrace poor practices. Common mistakes include:

No goals -- In a collegial law firm environment where equity shareholders are owners, establishing goals is akin to playing favorites among equals, so management avoids establishing practice group goals and instead relies on broad organizational goals. This approach generates numerous problems. When we don't know which group is generating the most profit, we tend to allocate resources haphazardly and randomly, thereby diluting the investment in high-growth areas and over-loading investment in weak performers. We also perpetuate subsidies of weak groups by strong groups, and while the organizational ledger may not explicitly reflect who's subsidizing whom, everyone generally knows and some are not happy about it. We also fail to take corrective action when a group that could be performing well isn't, because its poor performance is masked within the larger firm results.

Stretch goals -- These are goals that go well beyond the previous high water mark of achievement, without a specific plan for attaining them. Nothing wrong with stretching, of course, and countless athletes have thanked their coaches for pushing them beyond their known limits to achieve superior performance. But simply demanding significantly higher performance without providing additional support or guidance sends a message that prior performance is considered lazy. In fact, this might be lazy management. "Work smarter, not harder," the manager says, as if these words alone will unlock efficiencies. A stretch goal works when there is a corresponding plan in place to break through previous barriers.

Equalized goals -- When management has an unsophisticated understanding of the market and the organization's capabilities, it establishes the same goals across the board. Every group must achieve 5% revenue growth, or every group must cut costs by 10%, or every group must improve profits by 8%. It would be an extraordinarily unlikely occurrence in any multi-line business, and most law firms are quite diverse in their practice offerings, for all units to have the exact same opportunity within a specific fiscal year to achieve similar results. Establishing the same goals for all units is formulaic, and the lazy managers who rely on this approach can literally be replaced by spreadsheets.

 

So that's what not to do. What should we do?

We can only answer this by having a deep understanding of both our internal capabilities and the external business climate. It could very well be folly to establish a revenue growth goal of 20% in a market where the most successful competitor is growing at 8-10%. It could similarly be folly to expect profit improvement of 5% from a group that is top heavy (i.e., over-staffed by partners) and therefore poor leverage and rate pressures are likely to depress earnings. So for each group we must examine the market opportunity and the competitive landscape to establish a baseline, and then we must examine our internal capabilities and practice group characteristics to establish our desired performance relative to this baseline. This approach will very likely produce different goals for different practices, as no two markets share the exact same dynamics.

Each practice group should have its own particular analysis informing the goals, and a narrative explaining the rationale and short- and long-term impact of any investments. Let's walk through a couple very simple examples illustrating the benefits of marrying internal and external analysis to derive informed goals. We'll rely merely on narrative rather than spreadsheets here, for expediency.

Example 1

The IP practice group has a modest revenue CAGR of 8%. However, its 82% realization rate is lower than the 89% firm average, and the group's contribution margin at 21% is lower than the firm's 31% overall profit margin. Through competitive analysis we've determined that one of our key competitors is adding staff and winning new clients at a much higher rate, in part because of lower rates. While we can't discern the competitor's IP group profit margin, we have observed overall firm profits to be up significantly. We've determined that our competitor's low rates aren't "suicide pricing" but in fact reflect an investment in process improvement and project management. Through sources we've learned that they rely increasingly on fixed fees.

We invest in a process improvement and project management initiative, which in its first year will further burden our profit margin, but will bear fruit in year two and beyond. We set a goal to increase our realization rate to 85% by identifying which matter types and/or tasks are subject to the most client scrutiny and prioritizing these areas for improving efficiency. We modestly increase our revenue goal to 9%, reflecting our confidence that our efficiency initiative will stop the attrition of clients and generate new matters. To secure this future, we'll kick off a client satisfaction tour conducted by our CMO and managing partner for our top clients, and launch an end-of-matter satisfaction survey for every closed file. We will hold our contribution margin goal at 21%, reflecting the incremental investment in the above initiatives offset in part by a freeze in hiring -- given our expected efficiencies we believe we're properly staffed. But we don't stop there. We set preliminary 2- and 5-year goals for revenue and profit to reflect the ongoing benefits from this year's investments and we link our practice group leader's bonus to shepherding and achieving these goals.

Example 2

The Litigation practice group has enjoyed superior performance in recent years, subsidizing other groups with its above-average revenue and profit margin, but this is in large part due to a significant matter that is expected to conclude in the first quarter. The 18% year over year revenue for the last two years is certain to decline, and the high staffing levels related to the large matter will depress profits from the current 38% margin until these resources can be redeployed.

The concluding matter is being watched by numerous other players in the market, and a wave of similar litigation is expected in numerous jurisdictions. The lead partner has been asked to speak at an industry conference on the topic, and we've designed an all-out market blitz to capitalize on the notoriety. An integrated campaign of traditional and social media, including a new blog, has commenced, and all partners and most senior associates have a visible role to play. We expect by year end to have enrolled multiple new clients, though the billings won't be sizable until the following year. We've identified numerous other areas of litigation that provide excellent training opportunities for our numerous young associates, and we've made assignments, particularly to matters with alternative fee arrangements in place so the client won't object to additional timekeepers participating. Our utilization will remain high as these associates will be kept busy, but there is minimal incremental revenue associated with this time. We relied heavily on contract attorneys for some of the nuts and bolts of the complex litigation so that cost will disappear almost immediately, with the exception of a few stars we expect to hire full time. The net impact of these efforts results in a revenue goal of 9% over the current year and a profit margin goal of 32%.

Example 3

The Corporate practice group has enjoyed a 11% revenue CAGR in recent years and its healthy 28% profit margin allowed us to recently invest in several key lateral hires. These laterals are expected to import several new clients and present additional cross-sell opportunities beyond the healthy rate at which the Corporate group already collaborates across the firm.

We tend to be very cautious when recruiting laterals, eschewing "elephant hunting" for more strategic and targeted wins. As a result, each of our several lateral recruits has a confirmed revenue base to bring in, and our due diligence up front confirms that we can integrate these practices within the Corporate group to improve margins, as many of our under-utilized resources and existing technology can be deployed immediately to serve the new clients. The external market for the transactional areas in which we excel and which we have recently invested are booming, and while client fee pressure is expected down the road at the moment we are enjoying premium rates for most services. We therefore establish a revenue goal at 22% over the current year, including the lateral business, and an improved profit margin of 32%.

 

These examples are, by nature, simple narratives that overlook a significant amount of underlying complexity. However, the central point is that each practice has different external and internal characteristics that require different approaches and different objectives. Setting goals that are equal across the board would be patently unfair and would muddy the waters when analyzing performance. Setting goals that are unrealistic would be risky, particularly if a short-term dip in performance would significantly impair a partner's individual compensation and lead him or her to depart with a book of clients. And avoiding the establishment of practice-specific goals would likely result in starving the groups most in need of investment. Don't fall into the habits of lazy managers and establish weak goals. Do the work and establish realistic, informed goals. Your organization and your shareholders deserve nothing less.

 

Timothy B. Corcoran is the immediate past President of the Legal Marketing Association and an elected Fellow of the College of Law Practice Management. He delivers keynote presentations, conducts workshops, and advises leaders of law firms, in-house legal departments, and legal service providers on how to profit in a time of great change.  To inquire about his services, contact him at +1.609.557.7311 or at tim@corcoranconsultinggroup.com.

Compensation, Billable Hours Limiting Law Firms' Success

Legal Intelligencer reporters Gina Passarella and Hank Grezlak have authored a series of articles on the changing law firm business model and how law firms must adapt to compete. The first article in the series, "Law Firm 3.0: Information Changing Law Firm Models", can be found here. The second, "Compensation, Billable Hours Limiting Firms' Success," can be found here. In this second article I was quoted extensively, so here is some additional context for my comments.

 

"I don't think that the primary determinant for quality in the past, which has been size, is going to be as much of a factor going forward," according to Timothy Corcoran of Corcoran Consulting Group. He was referring to size of revenue, profits, head count and hours billed. "It is so tied up in everything related to Big Law and yet it is a red herring," Corcoran said. "Most businesses would not equate size with success."

Many law firm management committees and equity partners equate success with size. Bigger is better, in large part because the traditional law firm economic model requires additional timekeepers to grow revenues and profits. Want to make more money? Acquire a firm or a practice or recruit laterals. Want to be considered one of the elite attorneys in town? Establish the highest billable hour rate. Want to secure first place in your preferred ranking? Represent the most clients on the most matters in your chosen specialty. Want to secure front page coverage in the American Lawyer magazine? Secure the highest PPP (profits per partner) in the American Lawyer rankings. Yet few clients claim to value law firm size above all else. Experience matters, of course, and with transaction volume comes experience. But it's not the volume itself that delivers value -- it's the efficiency and predictability and comfort that comes with experience that clients seek.

 

Corcoran said he knows of partners who could double their books of business but choose not to do so because their firm compensates them for billing hours. The fastest growing segment of Corcoran's practice is compensation redesign, he said. For several years he has worked with firms on project management and alternative fees, but "sooner or later you run into a brick wall. And it's simply that, when you put a lawyer in a position of choosing between his economic self-interest and what is good for the firm on a long-term basis, they will oftentimes choose what benefits them," Corcoran said. He said he doesn't blame the partners for that. "In any business, if you have a compensation plan that is in conflict with your strategy, the compensation plan becomes your strategy," Corcoran said. He said firms can reward hunters and farmers—rainmakers and service partners. But right now, many firms have compensation strategies that are in conflict with the cross-selling initiatives most firms espouse, particularly the focus on origination without accounting for sharing the credit or without a willingness to move credit to a new partner who has taken over the bulk of the work. Corcoran said having different formulas to compensate different behaviors is where firms should go. "That will very likely result in income disparity and that is not, in and of itself, bad," Corcoran said.

Enduring businesses encounter different economic cycles, sometimes simultaneously. Product A is in a mature market with dominant market share, with high prices and high profits, but looming on the horizon are disruptive entrants offering more benefits at a substantially lower cost. Product B competes with a dozen similar offerings and while sales volume is high it offers very slim margins. Product C is a creative new entrant offered at an introductory price and is taking the market by storm, shifting significant market share from long-entrenched and higher-priced competitors. Product D is a luxury product offered in a market with a down economy in all sectors. Product E is a commodity product offered in a boom economy where consumer demand and discretionary spending as at an all-time high. Product F is a high-end product with a very limited addressable market, say multi-billionaires. Now... which one compensation plan can be imposed on all stakeholders -- salespeople, manufacturing, account managers, executives -- that perfectly aligns and drives appropriate behavior so that each product line secures the optimal balance of revenue, profit, and market share?

The corollary to law firms is that most firms rely on one compensation plan that applies equally to all equity partners, regardless of the economic cycle facing individual practices, the varying tenure and experience level of individual partners, or the particular business objectives of the firm this year. Absent a strategic plan and a compensation plan that are inextricably linked, particularly in an organization which retains no earnings, partners are likely to take actions that maximize their short-term income. And who can blame them? Issuing vague platitudes regarding the "firm as a family" culture but only rewarding individual billable hours isn't an indictment of self-serving partners; it's a management failing.

 

The law firm business model is maturing, with some help from the recession, but is really just facing the same business questions that other industries have already had to answer, Corcoran said. When demand was high, law firms would have a staff that looked like a grocery store with 37 checkout lines open at 2 a.m. even though there were only four shoppers in the store. The idea was firms would be ready for anything, Corcoran said. Law firms can't go to the opposite extreme of a [just-in-time] manufacturing business in which it would take an order and promise delivery in six weeks once it got the proper parts and people in place, he said. But they can rely on a flexible workforce of contract lawyers, legal process outsourcing and other alternative models. The "grocery store" can look like it has 37 lines open at 2 a.m., but the law firm is only paying for five of those cashiers as salaried employees, Corcoran said. "Downsizing isn't a big, traumatic affair," Corcoran said. "Every business on the planet ramps up for an initiative and then moves on [when it's over]. It's perfectly OK to rely on a flexible workforce." That means the number of lawyers on the stable payroll might be smaller, but the size of the overall workforce could fluctuate based on need, he said.

Corporations eschew the carrying cost of under-utilized resources. The reason law departments aren't huge -- and why many that are staffing up today will outsource those jobs under the next leadership regime -- is that the cost of recruiting and maintaining non-core assets presents an opportunity cost to the business. The local grocery store doesn't own apple orchards or cows because it can more efficiently purchase these items wholesale and resell them at a profit. And apple orchards don't rely solely on their own storefronts because they can earn greater profits selling produce to grocery stores. Businesses can hire law firms periodically at a far lower cost than employing a full staff of lawyers in all specialties who stand around waiting to be called. Law firms in turn, are expected to mobilize quickly. Traditionally this meant hiring a large staff of lawyers who scramble to look productive by billing time whenever they answer the phone or review a memo, some of which adds little value to a client matter. So law firms struggle to balance utilization (or how to keep lawyers busy without over-billing clients) and realization (what clients are willing to pay vs. what they've been billed). The most obvious lesson is lost on many law firm leaders: many law firms exist because they represent a good outsourcing opportunity for clients, so a sensible law firm staffing strategy should also rely on outsourcing to minimize carrying costs and provide maximum flexibility. There are many excellent lawyers available!

 

The fastest way to developing a new law firm model, Corcoran said, is to change compensation plans and not rely so heavily on the billable hour. Corcoran said the billable hour devalues the law firm's contribution far more than it impairs the buyer's ability to buy services. He described it as a "self-imposed [con]straint on revenues and profits. Once firms realize this, they will run from the billable hour," Corcoran said.

I'm surprised this is still a debate. And it is, even by those who should know better. Look, if you want to bill by the hour, go for it. If the services a law firm renders are priced within a range the client has established as tolerable, and the quality is measurably acceptable, then it may not be productive to quibble over the mechanics of the invoice.  But don't be surprised if the client recognizes the inherent conflict of interest, particularly when linked to a compensation system rewarding billable hours, and questions everything. If changing because the clients want you to isn't enough incentive, why not do it because it's a stupid economic model? If my daughter announced an interest in launching a lemonade stand in the front yard and came to me for capital infusion, the first caveat in her business case would likely not be "And I've imposed an absolute ceiling on the revenue I can earn." Yet this is what law firms do by adhering to the billable hour: "We have determined, on January 1st, that our number of timekeepers, multiplied by their respective billing rates, multiplied by the finite number of hours in each workday, will be our absolute cap on revenue. Hopefully we can continually find ways to reduce overhead costs if we wish to pocket more profits, otherwise we're forced to add more timekeepers to bill more hours... even though those timekeepers also come at a high cost."

In business we learn how to make money while we sleep. In many law firms, however, the sleeping is happening behind the wheel. The beauty of AFAs is that once the client agrees to a price, the law firm has every incentive to boost profits by finding lower-cost ways to deliver the same quality outcome, and the client doesn't need to meddle in the production or the invoicing or the staffing or the hours. This is why legal project management and process improvement are, and have always been, far more beneficial to law firms than to the clients.

 

"Sooner or later, everyone will catch up," Corcoran said. "But right now, those that are really changing, what an opportunity to grow market share."

This, in a nutshell, is the challenge and the opportunity. Clients and laggard competitors are providing the economic catalyst for change, and lessons from other business sectors provide the roadmap for thriving, not just surviving. Yet so many law firm leaders are reluctant to take action. Eventually, the ability for law firm  leaders and individual partners to control their own destiny will diminish. Why not act today?

 

Timothy B. Corcoran is the immediate past President of the Legal Marketing Association and an elected Fellow of the College of Law Practice Management. He delivers keynote presentations, conducts workshops, and advises leaders of law firms, in-house legal departments, and legal service providers on how to profit in a time of great change.  To inquire about his services, contact him at +1.609.557.7311 or at tim@corcoranconsultinggroup.com.

Infighting on Compensation Costs Law Firms Time and Money

Lately I've been spending a substantial amount of time working with law firm leaders on evaluating and redesigning -- yes, substantially rewriting -- partner compensation plans. As with many other categories of the law firm business, for far too long law firms have operated as if practicing law relies on, and generates, human behavior that is not subject to ordinary rewards and incentives found elsewhere. Incentive compensation is an area of significant study in businesses everywhere, yet most law firms have ignored the available research and developed plans that are simultaneously simplistic (focusing on billable hours as the primary objective), complex (requiring significant manual compilation and exhausting negotiations), and ineffective (too few are specifically linked to the firm's strategic plan). I'll be writing much more on this topic in the days ahead as we unwind and reinvent law firm compensation. I'm interested in your views on law firm compensation plans, so feel free to share insights and observations below or connect with me offline. Your insights, whether I agree or not, may be included in future articles. For now, enjoy the recent conversation I had with Lee Pacchia of Mimesis Law WebTV as we discuss how self-generated distractions of poor compensation plans can impair law firm productivity.

Timothy B. Corcoran is the immediate past President of the Legal Marketing Association and an elected Fellow of the College of Law Practice Management. He delivers keynote presentations, conducts workshops, and advises leaders of law firms, in-house legal departments, and legal service providers on how to profit in a time of great change.  To inquire about his services, contact him at +1.609.557.7311 or at tim@corcoranconsultinggroup.com.

7 Reasons Why Your Law Firm Has Not Yet Found the Right CMO

A number of law firm leaders have expressed concerns to me regarding what they perceive to be a lack of quality and qualified candidates for the most senior law firm marketing positions, such as chief marketing officer or chief business development officer. It's certainly plausible that some candidates who rose to senior-level law firm positions during times of plenty now face a daunting task of adapting to a much more competitive market. Square Peg in a Round HoleBut it's also clear that many law firm leaders have a poor understanding of the kind of marketing support they need, so they are unable to distinguish between suitable and unsuitable candidates. This, added to the poor processes many pursue to find candidates, means that too often we end up with mixed results. In my roles as both a consultant to law firm leaders and as 2014 president of the international Legal Marketing Association, I've captured the following recommendations to improve the process.

Hire to Support the Vision

Law firm growth plans typically lack specific financial targets and a clear market vision. Like a golfer who studies his swing, law firm leaders should strive to be "consciously competent." Why are we successful, what ingredients have led to our success, what factors have changed, what should do more, what should we stop doing? Marketing is about deeply understanding these issues and then marshaling the necessary resources to pursue a well-designed plan.

How can we possibly find the right champion if we don't know where we are, or where we're going? Be honest and clear about your vision and who will best help you pursue that vision. If you need to generate new business, why are you interviewing candidates whose expertise is in promotions and communications rather than in business development? If you struggle to achieve recognition in a crowded market, seek candidates with experience in branding and differentiation rather than coaching.

Enforce the Vision

In many law firms, there is more than one vision. Different practices, and even different offices, have achieved different levels of brand awareness and credibility. It's extraordinarily unlikely that in all markets, for all practices, your firm is perceived the same by all clients. All diverse businesses face this challenge and a good business strategy recognizes and incorporates these variations. However, if your firm has a disaggregated approach, allowing practices and partners to determine and pursue whatever go-to market strategies and tactics suit them, then your marketing leader needs a very different skill set than the firm with a very rigorous, disciplined and consistent approach.

If the executive committee can't reach agreement on a vision and strategy, let alone what skills and competencies are necessary for a senior marketing leader, and if you also allow partners to independently determine what they expect from marketing, understand that you have already limited your new CMO's effectiveness. Law firm leaders need to be clear and consistent in describing the skills and competencies for their most senior marketing leader.

Avoid Too Many Cooks

The hiring process for a chief marketing officer can be onerous, in part because many firms have too many stakeholders participating in the hiring process. Obviously, any senior marketer will need to interact with a large number of colleagues so it's important to see a cross-section of the firm, but it's unrealistic and impractical—even in the smaller firms—to try to assuage everyone's ego by involving them in a process that wastes time.

Firms should employ a rigorous approach to capturing feedback that maps the necessary skills and competencies to the position description, provides appropriate questions to guide the interviewer to examine these credentials, and provides a scoring tool to ensure consistency in feedback.

But Have Enough Cooks

In some firms, the opposite approach prevails and not enough people are involved in the hiring process. A strong leader, or a small group of leaders, pursues the search in isolation, crafting the position description and conducting all interviews, and sharing the results only when a candidate is hired. The trouble with this process is that it can work ... to a point. But by not including enough stakeholders in the process, the new CMO risks having his or her success rise or fall with that leader's political profile, rather than on individual accomplishments.

It's quite common for a new law firm leader to seek a new chief marketing officer, especially one with whom he or she can find the right chemistry. Chemistry is important, of course, but senior marketing leaders, like any senior business professionals, aren't nearly as effective if their authority comes from aligning with a champion than from their credentials and contributions. Law firms benefit when critical business decisions are shared among the senior executives rather than limited to a select few. It's important to strike the right balance of interviewers, both to secure buy-in and to capture robust feedback.

Avoid Perpetuating a Hero Culture

Some law firms pursue growth, any growth whatsoever, by pursuing new clients and cross-selling existing clients, by expanding the practice mix and adding laterals and acquisitions. With such a broad range of growth options, all deemed equally necessary by the stakeholders involved, it's quite challenging to prioritize when allocating insufficient marketing resources, time, and funds. Hiring more people isn't usually the answer, so instead we recruit heroes to swoop in and save the day with a superhuman effort again and again. These people inevitably burn out.

Heroes spend their days shuffling and then re-shuffling the pool of limited resources to ensure that today's crisis is handled while tomorrow's crisis is held at bay. The team is substantially focused on responding to a barrage of incoming requests, some of which are consistent with the strategic plan, some not so much. Too rarely are these heroes allowed to say no.

Hero culture is what many businesses fall into when they lack sustainable business processes. So when hiring a CMO, law firm leaders should ask candidates how they'd measure not just the ROI of marketing investments, but how they'd collaborate with other firm leaders to better understand and re-prioritize all of the firm's investments. If you rely on heroes to get through every day, your business processes are probably broken.

Choose: Profits or Partner Comfort

Hero cultures often gain prominence in organizations that value independence, as there are few incentives to work across boundaries for the good of the organization. In many law firms, partners are given wide latitude to manage their books of business as they see fit. The prevailing outcome, then, no matter what the strategy document contains, is that the highest purpose of the firm and its professionals support staff is to tend to the needs of the partners. This is a terrible business strategy. The best organizations perform well when everyone is focused on the same outcome, and follows a coordinated plan for achieving the same outcome.

If the spoken or unspoken rule in your firm is that the business professionals must respond to every partner demand without question, then you should either change the culture or be sure to hire a CMO who thrives in this environment. If your primary objective for the marketing function is not to improve the firm's financial performance but instead to hire people who won't "rock the boat," then hire accordingly. But you must also own the results. If the law firm leaders fail to lead, those tasked with execution will also fail.

Incorporate Clients

A recent survey of leading marketing professionals from a variety of fields revealed a surprising number of senior law firm marketers who have little interaction with clients, and no formal client feedback program in place. By contrast, marketing professionals from other industries claim to have a deep understanding of their client's business needs, buying approach and buying personas, and regular interaction and visibility with clients.

If client satisfaction matters to your firm—and it should—then recruit a CMO who has deep experience with your clients, or who has a successful methodology for discovering this. If you claim to be client-focused but won't allow the CMO to interact with clients, then stop pretending that client satisfaction matters.

Actions Speak Louder Than Words

The legal marketplace has changed and there are some senior marketers who struggle with these changes, just as there are junior marketers climbing the ranks or entering the legal profession with excellent new ideas. Too, there are well-credentialed newcomers to legal marketing who struggle adapting to the curious law firm culture, and legal marketing veterans who are skilled at getting things done. It's critical to find the right professional to fit your law firm's needs.

The breadth of skills and competencies among marketing professionals is at least as varied as among lawyers. Different skills and competencies suit different firm cultures, market positions and leadership styles. A marketing professional may introduce ideas and concepts and processes that take some getting used to. But if you make the right hiring choice, foster an environment conducive to success, and then measure results, you're going to like the result.

 

Timothy B. Corcoran is the immediate past President of the Legal Marketing Association and an elected Fellow of the College of Law Practice Management. He delivers keynote presentations, conducts workshops, and advises leaders of law firms, in-house legal departments, and legal service providers on how to profit in a time of great change.  To inquire about his services, contact him at +1.609.557.7311 or at tim@corcoranconsultinggroup.com.

 

Note: A version of this article first appeared in the Legal Intelligencer. Reprinted with permission.

Upcoming Workshops on Process Improvement and Project Management in Chicago and Washington, DC

While many visitors enjoy reading my insights into the changing face of the legal profession, others want more in-depth advice, instruction, and counseling.  Luckily, there's an app for that! In my day job as a management consultant, I work on-site with law firms, law departments, and legal service providers to embed and operationalize new ideas and business improvements into their organizations. To provide a glimpse into some of these ideas, my colleagues with the Legal Lean Sigma Institute, Catherine MacDonagh and Amy Hrehovcik, and I routinely offer open-enrollment workshops where we provide hands-on instruction. Please join us if you can at one of our upcoming events, details below. Process Improvement & Project Management White Belt Certification Course

Today's law firm and law department professionals are faced with continued challenges and opportunities to help maximize efficiencies. In reconnecting legal costs to the value received, we must begin with the voice of the client and then devise and employ strategies that deliver what clients want and competitive advantages for themselves. With process improvement (PI) and project management (PM), there are no tradeoffs – no one loses and everyone wins. This combined Legal Lean Sigma® Process Improvement White Belt Certification course will give you proven, disciplined approaches, tools and skills to take your role (and your firm, group, or department) to a new level of excellence and profitability. It is designed to provide an overview of Lean, Six Sigma and the fundamental drivers of project management and the essential elements of a quality project management initiative.

The workshop instructors have experience providing process improvement and project management courses in academia, training to lawyers in law firms and professional staff and law departments in multiple countries, and have implemented PI projects and LPM pilots within numerous law firms. The instructors also have direct experience managing high-stakes projects in both the corporate sector and in law firms. This certification course is experiential and interactive and requires full participation in order to be effective. Participants will leave with an appreciation for how project management, process improvement, law firm profitability and client satisfaction are inextricably linked. Plus, each attendee is eligible to receive a Certification in Legal Lean Sigma and Legal Project Management from the Legal Lean Sigma® Institute.LLSI

These interactive courses include experiential learning, table work, and discussions. We rely on case studies, examples, and success stories from our client law firms and legal departments to illustrate key learning points and to expose you to Six Sigma, Lean, and the principles of project management in context.  While we offer individual courses in Process Improvement and Project Management, we have found that offering both disciplines together more accurately reflects the realities of today's workplace:  A well-designed project plan can be impaired when impacted by inefficient processes; and the benefits of a well-designed process can be lost when combined with other inefficient processes as part of a larger project. Start with process improvement, start with project management - it almost doesn't matter. Sooner or later, you'll need to address both.

In addition to combining PI and PM, we also combine our own experiences: we have experience inside law firms, inside law departments, and as corporate executives managing the law department and hiring outside counsel. Our programs are practical and based on real-world experience. We balance the necessary academic content with the reality that most practitioners want to do it, not just learn about it.

Sample Process Improvement Agenda

  • Demonstration of a process - Time & Billing simulation
  • Key methodologies: Lean and Six Sigma
  • DMAIC: Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control
  • Define Phase exercise - process mapping
  • Getting Started and Structuring for Success

Sample Project Management Agenda

  • Connecting Project Management and Process Improvement
  • Project Management Fundamentals
  • Getting Started - Project Charter exercise
  • Risk Register
  • Getting Started in your organization

 

Washington, DC

Location: Wiley Rein, 1776 K Street NW, Washington, DC

Date: Thursday, October 2, 2014

Register here

 

Chicago, IL

Produced by The Ark Group

Location: Drinker, Biddle & Reath, 191 North Wacker Drive, Suite 3700, Chicago, IL

Date: Thursday, November 6, 2014

Register here

 

Timothy B. Corcoran is the 2014 President of the Legal Marketing Association and an elected Fellow of the College of Law Practice Management. He delivers keynote presentations, conducts workshops, and advises leaders of law firms, in-house legal departments, and legal service providers on how to profit in a time of great change.  To inquire about his services, contact him at +1.609.557.7311 or at tim@corcoranconsultinggroup.com.