Law firms – the most generous businesses in the world


Jeremy Black, associate partner in Deloitte’s professional practices group, begins a week-long look at the issue of external investment in law firms by considering the forces of change

Growing pressure: clients are demanding more for less

I am confident that I am breaking new ground here in that I don’t believe anyone in the past has described law firms as the most generous businesses in the world. But I do think many of them are.

At many firms new partners put in capital when they enter and it’s repaid when they leave at the value that they put it in at. Really it’s not actually equity capital but debt.

When partners come in, in most cases they are given their equity ownership for nothing. However, the fact that when leave, they part with it for nothing (sometimes referred to as ‘naked in, naked out’) is quite unusual in business.

If you think of senior executives in the corporate world, as part of their package they may receive share options (sometimes for nothing). They work in the business for many years and they grow the business. At the end of their tenure it is quite normal for them to cash in those options and not just give them away to someone else for nothing. Indeed, if they did choose not to cash them in it would be seen as very odd.

So law firms are unusual in this way, and this has two direct consequences for the topic I’m discussing:

  • The fact that the equity is not already owned, in a traditional sense, and is not traded could result in additional impetus for deals to be done with external investors; and
  • Law firms have traditionally focused on maximising short-term income rather than long-term capital value.

Change in the legal market

As well as the changes in regulation that will allow external investment from 6 October 2011, there are a number of other forces that will cause the sector to change

In terms of the demand for legal services:

  • Clients are becoming more demanding and we now regularly hear the statement ‘more for less’.
  • On the macro economy, as far as the developed economies are concerned it looks like growth will be relatively modest for some time into the future. The traditional partnership pyramid model can be difficult to run in the absence of rapid growth. In terms of world trade there are significant shifts with the BRIC countries accounting for a larger proportion of global growth than the G7.

On the supply side:

  • The lack of domestic growth will mean that in order for firms to grow they will need to take market share from competitors. They will need to do this either through offering a cheaper price or a better service. Competition will be fiercer.
  • On talent, the lack of partnership opportunities and the increase in the length of time to get there, mixed with Generation Y, will mean that the model to incentivise people will need to be developed and the carrot of partnership will not be such an effective tool in motivating lawyers – this in itself could affect profitability.

Finally technology. The debate on technology rages on, but I do think that technology is under-used by law firms. Why is it that if I send a parcel by DHL for £2.50 abroad, I am able to check as often as I want where it is in the process – on the van, at the depot, in the destination country and so on – but if I am paying a law firm £2,500 to purchase a property for £500,000, the only way to get information is to phone up, leave messages, leave more messages and eventually get through to someone who says they’ll have a look at the file.

Why are these changes relevant? Well what they mean is that the status quo is unlikely to be an option. Many firms will need to change if they are to prosper and in some cases that change may be expensive.

Over the rest of the week, I will look at what routes firms may choose to go down that would require fairly significant additional funding.

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    Readers Comments

  • Much of the above, I agree with although I suspect this subject will only apply to the small number of large firms that there are.

    Even then, I cannot see many investors interested in investing in law firms. They normally want a big return within a few years and an exit. Most law firms are so dependent upon their people that this is always at risk.

    There are better investments out there.

  • Thought provoking stuff, but I tend to agree with Andrew Woolley that the vast majorty of law firms are dependent on their people (or perhaps more accurately, some of their people) and would therfore be a risky investment. I’m in favour of ABS and external investment as a concept but it will not be for everyone. The debate – which tends to focus on the narrow “Tescolaw” issue has often missed the real point.


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