The Legal Industry Is Undergoing More Than a 'Dance Around Change'

Gina Passarella's recent article, "Talking Business of Law: The Dance Around Change," explores whether the long static legal industry is undergoing real change or simply dancing around it. The analysis emanates from her attendance at a panel discussion on law firm innovation hosted by an international firm. Let's put aside the irony of a law firm hosting such a discussion and return to Passarella's article and its somewhat halting conclusion that legal change is real even if incremental.

The author notes that clients and firms share common frustrations and explanations for why firms have largely stood pat. Partner blowback even when management pushes for change and not enough financial pain are the principal reasons cited. This is the view from the law firm perspective "It's not broke yet, so why fix it?" But the client view the one that matters paints a very different picture: "Law firms are not giving us what we want, so we are turning to other sources." Those options are presently taking work in-house and/or sourcing it to tech and process-enabled service providers that have a corporate structure and culture that aligns well with the clients/customers they serve. Clients and firms might agree on the explanation for firm stasis, but clients and service providers are doing something about it. Consider were law's situation to play out in the sports world owners and coaches might agree on why the team is not living up to expectations and justifying payroll, but guess who gets fired?

Passarella identifies several legal industry developments that suggest change is far from illusory. She cites the emergence of the Corporate Legal Operations Consortium (CLOC) as an industry force advancing operational change, and she could add the Association of Corporate Counsel's Legal Operations Group (ACC Legal Ops) as another powerful industry driver. She adverts to managed services and the legal supply chain that pairs law firms with service providers. This is far more significant than mere collaboration within the supply chain. It speaks to the bifurcation of legal service into "practice" what law firms sell and the business of delivering legal services what service providers offer. Practice is shrinking and legal delivery is expanding because providers are working with clients to automate, routinize and deploy the right resources human or technological to certain tasks/matters that cut across the enterprise.

Disaggregation stripping tasks once performed by law firms and now performed by corporate legal departments or service providers is also mentioned. So too is ALM Intelligence's report revealing 73 percent of legal work is now performed in-house with another 2 percent sourced to service providers. While some might question the market impact of service providers, consider that: (1) the U.S. legal industry is pegged at $400 billion/year that means service providers now account for $8 billion per annum and rising; (2) the ALM's 73 percent in-house figure includes "insourced" legal services work performed by corporate legal ops teams, which means that the 2 percent service provider share is considerably higher; and (3) law firm share is declining because legal "practice" is now separate from "legal delivery" and is steadily shrinking to include only those tasks (trial work, large transaction counsel, client consultation) that lawyers with differentiated skills and knowledge provide. Translation: elite lawyers are more valuable than ever but others in the firm are no longer presumptively a condition precedent to their retention. This real story behind the legal supply chain is that clients, not law firms, select the resources.